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Eurozone economy grows 0.3% on domestic demand

Madrid - Eurozone growth in the third quarter was bolstered by private consumption and government spending as exports suffered from a slowdown in global trade.

Gross domestic product in the 19-nation bloc rose 0.3% in the three months through September after expanding 0.4% in the prior quarter, the European Union’s statistics office said on Tuesday in Luxembourg, confirming a November 13 estimate.

The data come less than a week after the European Central Bank (ECB) cut one of its main interest rates to a record low and expanded its asset-purchase program to at least €1.5trn to shore up the region’s muted economic recovery and bring inflation closer toward 2%.

While domestic spending is benefiting from lower oil prices, exports are damped by an economic slowdown in emerging markets.

“The recovery remains very much a consumption-driven story going into 2016, and the external side should turn from neutral to slightly positive next year,” said Holger Schmieding, chief economist at Berenberg Bank in London.

“We have a dent caused by emerging markets, but the risk has lessened over the last two months.”

Domestic demand

Government spending climbed 0.6% in the third quarter from 0.3% in the previous three months, and household consumption accelerated to 0.4% from 0.3%.

Gross fixed capital formation was unchanged from the second quarter, when it rose a revised 0.1%. Exports rose 0.2% and imports increased 0.9%. From a year ago, the 19-nation economy expanded 1.6%, according to Eurostat.

The ECB presented fresh economic projections on December 3 that were largely unchanged from September, even as ECB President Mario Draghi pointed to downside risks emanating from “heightened uncertainties regarding developments in the global economy as well as to broader geopolitical risks.”

The central bank kept its growth forecast for next year at 1.7%, and revised a 2017 projection to 1.9% from 1.8%. The inflation outlook for 2016 was cut to 1% from 1.1%, and lowered to 1.6% from 1.7% for the following year.

Against the backdrop of steady, if slow, economic growth in the eurozone, policy makers agreed last week on additional stimulus including an extension of quantitative easing by six months until at least March 2017, a broadening of asset eligibility to local and regional debt, and a cut in the deposit rate to minus 0.3%.

While Draghi assured observers that the measures were “adequate” and Vice President Vitor Constancio said governors agreed on “exactly what the Executive Board proposed,” financial markets sent the euro soaring and stocks and bonds tumbling in a sign that more ambitious action was expected.

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