Europe sank to what may be the recession's low point in the first quarter of the year as tumbling German exports and investment plus further sharp drops in output elsewhere sped up the pace of a year-old contraction.
Official estimates today showed the first quarter was the worst on record at European level, although more up-to-date business surveys suggest that early 2009 may prove to be the low point of the first global recession since World War Two.
“Although we are nowhere near the peak in unemployment, we can safely assume that the first quarter was the worst in terms of the pace of decline,” said Martin van Vliet, an economist at ING bank.
“The latest ugly GDP figures should, however, mark the trough of the current 'Great Recession', said Alexander Koch, an economist at UniCredit bank.
GDP fell 2.5 per cent versus the last quarter of 2008, both at the level of the 16-country euro currency zone and the broader 27-country European Union bloc, according to the EU statistics office.
German GDP fell more than any quarter since reunification of the country in 1990, with GDP falling far more than forecasters had even imagined, diving 3.8 per cent from the last quarter of 2008, official statistics showed.
French GDP slid heavily too if less dramatically - by 1.2 per cent compared to the previous quarter, official figures showed, while Italian GDP fell 2.4 per cent, the sharpest dip since 1980.
Economists had forecast a bad but less dramatic fall of 2 per cent in euro zone GDP, after a drop of 1.6 per cent in the previous quarter and the declines in several eastern European countries outside the euro zone were no less startling.
Czech and Hungarian GDP reports showed the biggest drops since their records began.
Europe's plight is shared by the industrialised world and even fast-developing China showed its weakest pace of growth on record in the first quarter.
US GDP slid for the third straight quarter for the first time since the oil crisis recession of the mid-1970s, according to official data published on April 29th.
The drop of 6.1 per cent in the US method of counting equates to a fall of a bit more than 1.5 per cent in European measures, suggesting the first quarter there, while bad, was not quite as bad as in Europe.
Britain, which is not in the euro zone but depends heavily on its euro neighbours for trade, reported the biggest quarterly GDP drop since 1979 in the first quarter, when GDP contracted 1.9 per cent from the previous quarter. That estimate was issued on April 24th.
In all, while the figures are provisional and US data is often subject to heavy revision, the picture emerging from the first quarter is that GDP was dire across the board, but worse in mainland Europe.
The first quarter drop eased in the United States from the preceding quarter while it accelerated in the euro zone and Britain but the euro zone and broader EU drop was bigger than Britain's too.
More detailed information on GDP is expected on May 20 from Germany and many other mainland European countries as well as a first estimate from Japan, though polls of economists say Japanese GDP could have been the worst since World War Two in the opening quarter of 2009.
Reuters