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The World Economy

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  26 March 2020

Extract

There was a pause in growth in a number of European economies around the end of 1995, with weak domestic demand leading to moves to return stocks to more normal levels. This was exacerbated by bad weather in the first quarter of 1996. Rather pessimistic conclusions were widely drawn from these few months, but recent developments, especially in Germany have made us, and others, more optimistic about the short-term prospects. In the EU as a whole output rose by 0.49 per cent in the first quarter. Whilst output in France and Italy appears to have declined in the second quarter, in part due to statistical factors arising from the extra working day in the first quarter, growth remained at or above trend levels in the UK, Spain, the Netherlands and Denmark, and recovered significantly in Germany. Industrial output in Germany rose continually in the six months to August, with manufacturing output at its highest level since 1992. This has begun to be reflected elsewhere in the EU, with industrial confidence rising for the first time in 19 months.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © 1996 National Institute of Economic and Social Research

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Footnotes

We are grateful to Martin Weale, Garry Young and participants at a meeting of representatives from Central Banks, Finance Ministries and other European institutes, held at the Institute on October 14, for helpful comments and to Sarah Leeming for statistical assistance. The forecast was completed on October 17 1996.

References

Barrell, R.Morgan, J. and Pain, N. (1996), ‘The employment effects of the Maastricht fiscal criteria’, European Parliament Working Paper Social Affairs Series E-2.Google Scholar
Barrell, R., Morgan, J. and Pain, N. (1996), ‘The employment effects of the Maastricht fiscal criteria: an update’, European University Institute Discussion Paper.Google Scholar