By Oyintari Ben
The more optimistic forecast is attributable to a decreased reliance on gas, as the 27 member states of the union moved to wean themselves off Russian supplies after Russia invaded Ukraine last year.
The EU economy is expected to avoid recession with lower inflation and higher growth than anticipated, which paints a more optimistic image of the EU economy.
According to the EU’s winter economic prediction, the group will now avoid a technical recession, which occurs when the economy experiences six months of economic contraction.
The EU’s most recent economic prediction, released in November, had predicted a recession, but 3.5% annual growth is now projected for 2022.
The most recent prediction indicates that growth will last the entire year. The union anticipates that the economy will expand by 0.8% across the 27 nations in 2023, up from the 0.3% expected in the autumn economic prediction.
At 1.6%, the growth rate for 2024 is unaltered.
Similar to how unemployment is still at an all-time low of 6.1%, inflation has peaked and revised downward for this year and next.
In December of last year, the rate of price increases decreased from 11.1% in November to 10.4%, but it was still higher than the rate of 5.3% in November.
The lowering rate of energy price increases was a significant factor in the drop. Inflation is anticipated to decline to 6.4% in 2023 and 2.8% in 2024, which means higher prices will persist.
Although energy expenditures are still high overall, less reliance on gas and lower gas prices are responsible for the more optimistic prognosis. Growth has been aided by lower wholesale gas costs, the sourcing of more power from alternative sources, and a reduction in gas usage.
However, Paolo Gentiloni, the European commissioner for the economy, cautioned that conditions were still challenging and that inflation would only gradually loosen “its grip on buying power.”
“This doesn’t imply we have a positive overall perspective,” Mr Gentiloni said, adding that the picture is “less bad than we feared.”