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Eurozone growth momentum has slowed in recent months: ECB

07 August 2014, 22:49 CET
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Eurozone growth momentum has slowed in recent months: ECB

Mario Draghi

(FRANKFURT) - The eurozone recovery could be faltering already, with downside risks arising from the latest geopolitical developments, European Central Bank president Mario Draghi said on Thursday.

"A sign in the data that has shown up in the last two or three months ... (is) that there has a been a slowing down in the growth momentum," Draghi told a news conference, adding that the recovery "remains weak, fragile and uneven."

In particular, geopolitical risks -- from the Russia-Ukraine crisis and the different trouble spots in the Middle East -- "have increased and a higher than they were a few months ago," the ECB chief said.

"Some will have greater impact on the euro area than on other areas around the world," he continued, but insisted their precise economic impact was still very difficult to assess at this stage.

The fallout from the situation in Russia and Ukraine, with the possibility of sanctions and counter-sanctions, was "very hard to assess," Draghi said.

In the first quarter of 2014, euro area gross domestic product (GDP) expanded by 0.2 percent.

And the monthly indicators so far for the second quarter, "have been somewhat volatile," Draghi said.

However, "overall, recent information, including survey data available for July, remains consistent with our expectation of a continued moderate and uneven recovery of the euro area economy," he said.

Draghi said the ECB would "closely monitor the possible repercussions of heightened geopolitical risks and exchange rate developments."

There has been ongoing concern among politicians and businesses that the euro's strength is harming eurozone exporters.

But Draghi said the economic fundamentals for a softer euro have improved recently.

"The fundamentals for a weaker exchange rate are better than they were two or three months ago," Draghi said.


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