Courtesy of Mish.
Eurozone manufacturing is at a 31-month high according to Markit. Every country but France and Greece are expanding. French manufacturing is at a seven-month low in an intensified downturn.
The seasonally adjusted Markit Eurozone Manufacturing PMI® rose for the third month running to post 52.7 in December, up from 51.6 in November (and unchanged from the earlier flash estimate).
The latest improvement in overall operating conditions was underpinned by solid and accelerated growth in the Netherlands, Germany, Ireland and Italy, while Austria continued to expand at a robust clip despite the rate of increase easing slightly since November. Meanwhile the Spanish PMI moved back into expansion territory. There was even relatively positive news from Greece, where higher levels of output and new orders elevated its PMI to a 52-month high and close to the 50.0 stabilisation point. France moved in the opposite direction, however, with its PMI falling to a seven – month low and signalling contraction for the twenty-second successive month.
Chief Economist Comment
Markit Chief Economist Chris Williamson
“While Germany, Italy and Spain are seeing the strongest output growth since early – 2011, buoyed to varying degrees by improved export sales, France is seeing a steepening downturn, in part the result of widening export losses. This suggest s that competitiveness is a key issue which the French manufacturing sector needs to address to catch up with its peers.”
Hollande Concedes Taxes ‘Too Heavy’ Offending Everyone
French president François Hollande rang the bell on the new year the same way he rang the bell throughout 2013, with an economic as well as public relations gaffe.
His vague promise of lower taxes coupled with an admission on national TV that taxes are too high, infuriated French households facing tax rises now, at the start of the year.
The Telegraph explains François Hollande concedes taxes ‘too heavy’ in admission that annoys all sides in France.
A New Year’s message from François Hollande backfired as his vague promise that taxes would be lowered some time in the future jarred with French voters facing tax increases that took effect as he was speaking.
Instead of winning plaudits for his unexpected admission that taxes had become “too heavy, much too heavy”, the unpopular socialist president – weakened by tax increases, rising unemployment and a shrinking economy – provoked incredulity and scepticism among critics on both Left and Right.
Hard-pressed French households faced VAT increases on most goods and services from Jan 1 and only days earlier France’s supreme court had upheld a new 75 per cent supertax on high-paying companies.
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