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Eurozone Inflation Up, Unemployment Steady

Eurozone Inflation Up, Unemployment Steady
Eurozone Inflation Up, Unemployment Steady

Eurozone inflation edged up to 0.4 percent from multi-year lows while unemployment was little changed, official data showed Friday, providing only limited reassurance that a modest economic recovery remains on track.

Analysts said the figures were far from encouraging, with the European Central Bank likely to come under additional pressure from anxious governments to do more to get the economy moving again, AFP reported.

Inflation in the 18-nation eurozone rose to 0.4 percent in October from 0.3 percent in September, which was the lowest in five years, the Eurostat  statistics agency said.

The unemployment rate in September came in at 11.5 percent, unchanged compared with August and July.

The total September jobless numbers came to 18.34 million, down only 19,000 from August.

The inflation figure remains far below the 2.0 percent target set by the ECB, whose core mission is to ensure price stability.

Low inflation usually reflects soft demand in an economy and at current levels has stoked fears of deflation -- when prices actually fall.

If deflation takes hold, consumers put off purchases knowing they can buy the same product cheaper if they wait, which undercuts demand further. Faced with that prospect, companies defer investment, hitting jobs and salaries which in turn adds to the downward spiral.

In recent months the ECB has taken increasingly radical action to try and pump up credit to boost demand and fend off deflation.

  Unemployment

On the employment front, the figures highlight how the economy has slowed steadily, with job creation faltering to the dismay of governments everywhere.

With inflation “still close to zero in October and the unemployment rate holding near a record high, there remains a significant risk of deflation,”  said Jennifer McKeown of Capital Economics.

The slowdown first began to show up in the figures late last year, with eurozone economic growth in the three months to December 2014 just 0.2 percent, followed by 0.2 percent in first quarter 2014 and then zero in the second quarter.

Meanwhile, Italy’s unemployment rate rose against analysts’ expectations in September, increasing the pressure on Prime Minister Matteo Renzi who is battling trade unions over measures to overhaul the job market.

The jobless rate rose from 12.5 percent in August to 12.6 percent in September, data from the national statistics institute (ISTAT) showed on Friday. Economists had tabled on a drop to 12.4 percent.

According to data adjusted for seasonal blips, 3.24 million people were actively seeking work, up 1.5 percent on the figure a month earlier and 1.8  percent on a year.

Youth unemployment, which had been at a record high, dipped slightly to 42.9 percent from 43.7 percent in September.

Financialtribune.com