Greek economy contracts less than expected

The economy shrank 3.7 per cent last year, below the government and EU/IMF forecast

Greek prime minister Antonis Samaras. Greece’s gross domestic product has consistently missed targets set under its EU/IMF bailout. Photograph: Thomas Peter/Reuters
Greek prime minister Antonis Samaras. Greece’s gross domestic product has consistently missed targets set under its EU/IMF bailout. Photograph: Thomas Peter/Reuters

Greece’s economy shrank by a smaller-than-expected 3.7 per cent last year, marking the first time it has outperformed expectations since a debt crisis took hold and boosting hopes for a recovery this year.

Greece’s gross domestic product has consistently missed targets set under its EU/IMF bailout partly due to a greater-than-expected impact from austerity cuts, making it ever harder for the country to reach fiscal goals set by the lenders and raising the pressure for additional austerity measures.

The flash estimate of a 2.6 per cent decline in gross domestic product in the fourth quarter marked the smallest fall in economic output since the second quarter of 2010 on an annual basis.

That meant the economy shrank 3.7 per cent last year, below the government and EU/IMF forecast of a 4 per cent contraction and well below an initial estimate for a 4.5 per cent fall.

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The seasonally unadjusted data followed a 3 per cent output decline in the third quarter.

The six-year slump has rendered Greece’s €182 billion economy 23 per cent smaller and driven its unemployment rate to a record 28 per cent after austerity measures were imposed to shore up public finances.

The country’s international lenders funding its €240 billion bailout project a mild recovery will take root in 2014, expecting GDP to expand by 0.6 per cent.

Recent data, such as retail sales, car sales, industrial output, construction and manufacturing activity (PMI) suggest the economy has most probably bottomed out and is set to pull out from recession this year.

Greece does not publish official quarter-on-quarter changes in GDP, which most countries use to measure their economic performance.

Reuters