A eurozone recession is looming. Just how bad
will it be?
Recession is ‘on the cards’ for the eurozone, key
business survey shows.
BY JOHANNA
TREECK AND PAOLA TAMMA
SEPTEMBER
23, 2022 2:01 PM
https://www.politico.eu/article/eurozone-recession-looming-politics-sanctions-russia-energy/
Europe is
sliding into recession as persistently high inflation and economic uncertainty
stifle spending and energy blackouts loom.
On
Thursday, a key indicator showed business and consumer confidence in the EU and
euro area fell sharply in September, the umpteenth sign of a worsening outlook
for the bloc.
Last
Friday, the influential PMI survey of 5,000 businesses across the eurozone
pointed to a recession and the worst economic performance since 2013 — barring
the pandemic lockdown months.
“Evidence
for a recession is accumulating,” said Commerzbank economist Christoph Weil
following the PMI survey release. In addition to skyrocketing prices hitting
spending and production, “uncertainty about future gas supplies is making
companies more cautious, which argues for less investment.”
The
European Central Bank now expects a technical recession this winter, defined as
two consecutive quarters of negative growth.
Inflation
keeps rising, reaching double digits in Germany for the first time since
joining the euro area.
The rise in
prices prompted the ECB to hike rates by 125 basis points already, and
promising more in coming months.
“We are
well aware that those decisions that we make on interest rates in order to
fight inflation have an impact on those who borrow and those who lend,” ECB
President Christine Lagarde said Monday, adding: “Yes there will be
consequences of different sorts but the purpose is price stability.”
That in
turn raises fears that tightening the money supply might precipitate a
recession.
“The ECB is
basically thinks it's normalizing policy, but in the current circumstance, it's
actually amplifying a downturn,” said Alex Brazier, deputy head at BlackRock
Investment Institute.
All that
economic hardship is set to feed political tension and opposition to sanctions
against Russia, spooking politicians that difficult months lays ahead.
“We may be
well be heading into one of the most challenging winters in generations,” EU
Economy Commissioner Paolo Gentiloni said last week.
Recession coming
ECB chief
economist Philip Lane earlier this week conceded that the eurozone is
dangerously close to recession. Official forecasts, which have long been more
optimistic than most private sector equivalents, see growth stagnating in the
final quarter of this year and the first quarter of next year. “If we think our
base case is to barely grow, a technical recession, falling into a mild
recession cannot be ruled out,” Lane said.
Since the
ECB’s forecasts, Germany’s Bundesbank warned that “there are mounting signs of
a recession in the German economy in the sense of a clear, broad-based and
prolonged decline in economic output.”
The
Munich-based Ifo Institute now predicts a winter recession for Germany, with output
shrinking by 0.3 percent next year, while Deutsche Bank expects a massive fall
of 3 to 4 percent.
A notable
downgrade in growth projections for Germany, the eurozone’s largest economy,
could easily put the balance for the region as a whole toward recession.
This is now
the baseline case for most economists. A recent Bloomberg poll showed the
probability of two straight quarters of contraction at 80 percent in the next
year, up from 60 percent in a previous survey.
“After
growing robustly through Q2, as economies finally exited COVID restrictions,
the region is now descending deeper into an energy crisis,” said Barclays
economist Christian Keller. “We expect several quarters of output contraction,
combined with stubbornly high headline inflation.”
How bad will it get?
The
question is how severe this recession will be. Lane and other ECB officials,
including Bundesbank chief Joachim Nagel, have said that any downturn is likely
to be mild. Private forecasters are more bearish.
On
Wednesday, Deutsche Bank’s economists said their projections for a “mild
recession” in Europe are no longer valid as the energy crisis has escalated. It
cut the forecast to -2.2 percent from the previous 0.3 percent.
Barclays
expects the eurozone to contract by 1.1 percent next year.
Blackrock
Investment Institute forecasts a 1.1 percent contraction in output in 2023,
equivalent to a 2 percentage points drop from peak to trough.
“So not a
mini-recession at all, [but] a full-blown recession,” said Alex Brazier, deputy
head at BlackRock Investment Institute.
Putin’s
latest escalation of the war will do little to brighten prospects for the
region.
Inflicting pain
The trouble
is that, unlike in previous recession episodes, the ECB cannot help to cushion
the impact of economic contraction. On the contrary, to fight raging inflation
it has to tighten monetary policy. ECB President Christine Lagarde earlier this
week for the first time raised the possibility that policymakers will have to
lift key interest rates so high that they will actively slow already meager
economic growth.
There are
no signs of price pressures relenting any time soon. The PMI survey showed that
the surge in energy costs has reignited inflationary pressures and therefore
“the challenge facing policymakers of taming inflation while avoiding a hard
landing for the economy is therefore becoming increasingly difficult,”
S&P's Williamson said.
“The ECB
faces a very brutal trade-off here between persistent core inflation, and
generating a recession. And I don't think they've quite acknowledged the scale
of that trade-off yet,” said Brazier, adding: “Once that trade-off is
acknowledged, we'll see a clearer picture.”
Political fallout
While euro
area employment is at an all-time high, real wages have declined, as wage
growth failed to keep up with inflation — undercutting workers’ purchasing
power and generating a cost-of-living crisis.
Italy’s
business lobby Confindustria has warned that between 400,000 and 600,000 jobs
might be lost as a result of high gas prices.
Popular
discontent has started to show, with protests erupting in the Czech Republic,
Slovakia, Poland and Germany against high energy prices and, at times, taking
aim at EU energy policy.
Governments
across Europe have sought to keep discontent in check by pouring hundreds of
billions into cushioning energy prices for households and businesses, but
that’s unlikely to offer long-lasting relief.
Their fear
is that economic pain will generate backlash against the EU’s sanctions against
Russia, and make it hard to sustain unity and resolve in the long run.
Some
already liken the current economic downturn to self-harm.
“We won't
help Ukraine if we break our industrial backbone,” Sarah Wagenknecht of
Germany's far-left Die Linke said.
"A
recession is not inevitable, but the chances of one are rising," EU
Economy Commissioner Paolo Gentiloni said Friday, adding: "We may be well
be heading into one of the most challenging winters in generations."
UPDATED:
This story has been updated to reflect new economic data.
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