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Eurozone economy shrank at start of year due to Ireland contraction

Mark Schroers / Bloomberg
Mark Schroers / Bloomberg • 2 min read
Eurozone economy shrank at start of year due to Ireland contraction
Office buildings in Dublin, Ireland. Eurostat said on Friday that the eurozone's GDP fell 0.2% between January and March was mainly due to a sharp downward restatement of Irish GDP, which slumped 12.1%. (Photo by Bloomberg)
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(June 5): The eurozone economy shrank at the start of the year after an unprecedented contraction in Ireland forced a revision to data that originally showed feeble growth.

Gross domestic product (GDP) fell 0.2% between January and March, Eurostat said on Friday, compared to an earlier estimate of 0.1% growth. That’s mainly due to a sharp downward restatement of Irish GDP, which slumped 12.1% rather than the 2% previously measured.

While the large number of multinationals based in Ireland often contorts data for the overall euro area, the huge first-quarter drop makes it even harder to work out where the region’s economy is heading. That complicates the European Central Bank’s task in assessing the fallout from the Iran war and calibrating the appropriate monetary-policy response.

Officials have widely signalled a first interest-rate hike since 2023 at next week’s meeting, arguing they can no longer look through the energy shock that already drove euro-area inflation to 3.2%. However, some officials also worry higher oil and gas prices will derail the nascent recovery.

Business activity in the region already fell over the past two months, with the contraction in May even reaching the quickest pace since 2024.

Earlier this week, the OECD said the euro area will grow just 0.8% this year and warned that “recent indicators suggest deteriorating sentiment”.

See also: UK’s biggest retailers cut 18,000 jobs since Labour’s tax rises

Aside from the Irish data, statistics in bigger economies have also been revised in recent days. French GDP fell, while Italy’s was better than previously reported.

In Ireland itself, the multinational sector in Ireland shrank 27% in the period. But underlying data showed a far more positive picture. Modified domestic demand — a more accurate measure of the economy — grew 0.6%, driven by personal spending.

Uploaded by Felyx Teoh

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