Bloomberg: Greece back into recession
- Written by E.Tsiliopoulos
Greece’s economy went back into recession in the first quarter as a standoff with its international creditors renewed doubts about its place in the euro area.
Gross domestic product contracted 0.2 percent in the three months through March after shrinking 0.4 percent in the previous period, the European Union’s statistics office in Luxembourg said Wednesday. The median estimate in a Bloomberg survey was for a 0.5 percent drop.
Greece last year emerged from its worst slump since World War II, which wiped out about a quarter of economic output and left one in four people without a job. That backdrop drove Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras’s government to power in January elections on a pledge to push the country’s euro-area partners to ease the country’s bailout conditions.
Instead, liquidity has dried up as the euro area and International Monetary Fund have held firm that Greece must adhere to terms agreed by previous governments and withheld loans from the 240 billion-euro ($270 billion) bailout.
The economy expanded 0.8 percent in 2014 after six years of contraction wiped out about a quarter of the nation’s output. The European Commission last week cut its forecast for Greek GDP growth this year to 0.5 percent from a previous forecast of 2.5 percent.
Related items
- Schinas visits Dadia forest to address black vulture conservation efforts after the devastating fires of 2023
- Tourism Minister Kefalogianni meets new Japanese Ambassador Koichi Ito
- Mitsotakis-Erdogan Meeting in Ankara Fixed for May 13
- Hatzidakis in Washington for IMF and World Bank meetings
- Erdoğan flies off the bat: "Israel surpassed Hitler, it is a state of terrorists"
Latest from E.Tsiliopoulos
- Schinas visits Dadia forest to address black vulture conservation efforts after the devastating fires of 2023
- Tourism Minister Kefalogianni meets new Japanese Ambassador Koichi Ito
- Mitsotakis-Erdogan Meeting in Ankara Fixed for May 13
- Turks flock to Greek islands after vis-on-arrival process
- Hatzidakis in Washington for IMF and World Bank meetings