Eurozone: A Slow Recovery in the Making

The eurozone is losing the recovery race.

As the U.S economy continues to expand at a nice rate of speed, the eurozone is stuck in a pitstop. Though the common currency region was able to avoid a technical recession last year, preliminary estimates show that activity stagnated in the fourth quarter of 2023. Incoming surveys and data suggest that the worst is over, but the road ahead is anything but smooth.

Trade-dependent European economies such as Germany, which are more exposed to the downturn in global manufacturing, have been the main drag on growth. The eurozone’s largest economy has turned from being a poster child to the worst performing major economy. Germany’s export-oriented growth model looks to be kaput, amid rising geopolitical tensions and a slowdown in China. Berlin’s largest trade partner has also emerged as its main competitor, as China dethroned Japan to became the world’s top auto exporter.

Tight monetary conditions in Europe have contributed to increasing economic divergence with the United States. Borrowing costs for non-financial corporations and households have surged in the past two years (see below chart). With banks representing a more important source of credit in Europe than in the U.S., high interest rates have curbed activity much more directly. By contrast, financial conditions in the U.S. have continued to ease over the past few months, despite elevated policy rates.

Real GDP