Brussels (AFP)

The European economy returned to growth in the spring, benefiting from progress in vaccination against Covid-19 and a gradual lifting of health restrictions, according to figures released by Eurostat on Friday.

The gross domestic product (GDP) of the euro area rebounded 2% in the second quarter compared to the previous one, after two consecutive quarterly declines, announced the European statistics office.

For the European Union as a whole, the increase reached 1.9%.

Among the large countries, France recorded the worst performance (+ 0.9%), behind Spain (+ 2.8%), Italy (+ 2.7%) and Germany (+1 , 5%).

In the first quarter, the euro area's GDP fell by 0.3%, after falling 0.6% in the last three months of 2020.

Experts expected this strong rebound over the April-June period, thanks to the gradual lifting of health restrictions which had slowed down activity, particularly in transport, hotels and restaurants and tourism.

The improvement on the growth front has had repercussions on the job market.

The euro zone unemployment rate fell sharply in June, affecting 7.7% of the working population, after 8% in May.

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For the European Union as a whole, unemployment fell by 0.2 point over one month to 7.1%.

Some 14.9 million men and women were unemployed in the EU in June, including 12.5 million in the euro area.

The only downside is that the annual inflation rate in the euro zone rose in July to 2.2%, exceeding the ECB's 2% target, while the rise in consumer prices worries investors.

These price pressures are causing financial markets to fear a rise in interest rates.

But the European Central Bank like the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and many experts consider this rise in inflation "temporary".

"The recovery of the euro area economy is on track," ECB President Christine Lagarde said last week, while worrying about a possible fourth wave that could put the brakes on again. justifying the maintenance of an accommodating monetary policy.

The pandemic "continues to cast a shadow" because "the Delta variant constitutes a growing source of uncertainty," she added.

The ECB does not anticipate a hike in its historically low rates as long as inflation does not “permanently” exceed 2%.

© 2021 AFP