Tuesday, February 14, 2012

Greek Economy Shrank Greater-Than-Forecast 6.8% Last Year on Spending Cuts

Bloomberg
February 14, 2012

Greece’s economy, reeling from austerity measures demanded by creditors in exchange for rescue funds, contracted almost a percentage point more last year than the government forecast, according to Bloomberg calculations.

Gross domestic product fell 7 percent from a year earlier in the fourth quarter after contracting a revised 5 percent on an annual basis in the previous three months, the Athens-based Hellenic Statistical Authority said in an e-mailed statement today. GDP declined 6.8 percent in 2011, according to Bloomberg calculations, compared with a 6 percent contraction estimated in the government’s 2012 budget.

“Recessionary pressures have intensified as the impact from additional austerity measures have been amplified by high uncertainty about the prospects of the country,” said Nicholas Magginas, an economist at National Bank of Greece SA in Athens.

Greece is now in its fifth year of a recession. Prime Minister Lucas Papademos’s government on Feb. 13 passed through Parliament a new package of austerity measures demanded by the so-called troika of the European Commission, International Monetary Fund and European Central Bank in exchange for a 130 billion-euro ($172 billion) rescue. It got its first financial lifeline in May 2010.

The troika demanded deeper spending cuts from Greece when drafting the conditions for its new rescue package to take into account that GDP would contract more than previous forecasts.

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