European industrial orders down 34.5%
Industrial orders in the euro zone have fallen by 34.5 percent compared to last year and fell at their fastest rate in over 13 years in February as the global economic slowdown has meant that the demand for factory equipment and metal work has fallen drastically.
The European Union’s statistics office said today that the February drop is the largest on record, however economists had forecast a larger drop of 34.8 percent.
In February, new orders fell by 0.6 percent whilst the International Monetary Fund (IMF) said they estimate the euro zone will contract by a further 4.2 percent this year which means that the downward trend is set to continue.
This news has placed even more pressure on the European Central Bank (ECB) to take a more aggressive stance on reviving economic growth.
As capital goods have struggled, so has intermediate goods demand which has fallen by 3.2 percent from month-to-month, in a period where non durable consumer goods actually increased by 1.3 percent.
The IMF has said that the ECB still has further room to cut the benchmark interest rate to 1.25 percent, which should help to stimulate the economy and provide much needed help to the industrial and manufacturing sectors.
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