EMU GDP Estimate and Early Reporters Show Some Life
GDP growth in the European Monetary Union advanced by 1.5% in the third quarter at an annual rate, an acceleration from the second quarter’s 0.8% rise. It compares to gain of 1.2% at an annual rate in the first quarter. It is also the strongest quarterly rise since an increase of 2.4% at an annual rate in the third quarter of 2022. The year-over-year change is a gain of 0.9%, compared to 0.6% in the second quarter. That is the strongest year-over-year gain since the first quarter of 2023 when GDP rose by 1.4% year-over-year.
There are seven early reporting EMU members. Among these seven, four showed GDP advancing at a stronger pace in Q3 (Q/Q) than in Q2. Weaker growth was registered by Belgium and Italy with Portugal’s growth unchanged quarter-to-quarter.
Over the last six months, the large EMU economies have been holding back overall growth. The four largest EMU economies saw growth advance by 1.1% at an annual rate in 2024-Q3 compared to 2.5% growth in the rest of the EMU. In the second quarter, growth among the largest four economies also trailed growth in the rest of the monetary union. This is a switch from the usual standard. But year-on-year growth in the smaller economies is also higher in Q3 than in the largest four economies although that is the reverse of the previous three quarters.
Growth in the region has been weak for some time. The ranking of year-over-year growth rates on data back to 1997 shows all early reporting EMU members have rankings of growth in Q3 (year-on-year growth) below their historic medians (below a ranking of 50%) except Portugal and Spain. Portugal and Spain are exceptions with year-on-year growth rates that rank above 50% as well as above the ranking of the United States.
In the third quarter, only Italy has a negative quarter-to-quarter growth rate. Over four-quarters, only Germany and Ireland have negative quarter-to-quarter growth rates. Germany that does not have two quarters of negative (quarterly) growth back-to-back in the last three quarters has five consecutive quarters of negative year-over-year growth! However, the growth decline on this timeline has been modest. For Germany, this has been much more a period of pronounced economic stagnation than of economic decline.
Since 2011, the U.S. has had averages GDP growth about one percentage point (annualized) faster than the EMU. Since 2021, that difference has been the same on year-over-year comparisons, but it has become larger favoring the U.S. on quarterly comparisons. The median growth rate among early EMU reporters ranks at 40.2% while EMU growth ranks lower at 32.6% largely because the slower growing large economies have a greater weight in the EMU GDP construction than in the calculation of the median.
Robert Brusca
AuthorMore in Author Profile »Robert A. Brusca is Chief Economist of Fact and Opinion Economics, a consulting firm he founded in Manhattan. He has been an economist on Wall Street for over 25 years. He has visited central banking and large institutional clients in over 30 countries in his career as an economist. Mr. Brusca was a Divisional Research Chief at the Federal Reserve Bank of NY (Chief of the International Financial markets Division), a Fed Watcher at Irving Trust and Chief Economist at Nikko Securities International. He is widely quoted and appears in various media. Mr. Brusca holds an MA and Ph.D. in economics from Michigan State University and a BA in Economics from the University of Michigan. His research pursues his strong interests in non aligned policy economics as well as international economics. FAO Economics’ research targets investors to assist them in making better investment decisions in stocks, bonds and in a variety of international assets. The company does not manage money and has no conflicts in giving economic advice.