European manufacturing slows down

23 June 2022

Growth in Europe’s two largest economies slowed sharply as manufacturers suffered from a dearth of demand, increasingly strained supply chains and surging prices. With the initial boost from a loosening of Covid-19 restrictions in Germany and France wearing off, gauges of activity fell more than expected in June. Manufacturing output contracted in both countries. This was reported by Bloomberg, commenting on the surveys of S&P Global.

 

 

Service providers also suffered, with activity cooling after the boost from the phasing out of coronavirus lockdowns faded.

“Germany’s economy has lost virtually all the momentum gained from the easing of virus-related restrictions,” S&P Global economist Phil Smith said Thursday in a release. “But perhaps the biggest cause for concern is a broad-based decline in demand.”

The reports signaled that, for now, economic activity is still being supported to some extent by workloads built-up earlier in the year. But the range of challenges confronting the world economy has led to worries that a recession is on the horizon.

Those fears are being fanned by rising interest rates, with the European Central Bank set to hike borrowing costs for the first time in more than a decade in July.

Amid the grim outlook, Germany and France saw job growth slow as companies start to reassess their staffing needs, S&P Global said.

 


Paese: France| Germany
catene di approvvigionamento| Domanda| Bloomberg| covid-19| Servizi| Manifatturiero| S&P| rimbalzo

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