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ID128393
Title ProperTwo-speed recovery
Other Title InformationUS vs. EU
LanguageENG
AuthorHousel, Morgan
Publication2014.
Summary / Abstract (Note)The August 2013 gross domestic product report by the US Bureau of Economic Analysis drew little attention, but it contained a fairly remarkable piece of data: Inflation-adjusted GDP per capita in the United States hit a new all-time high in the second quarter of 2013, the first time a new high had been reached since 2007. Real consumer spending has hit a new high, too, and auto sales are at levels not seen since before the financial crisis. Millions of Americans are still searching for work and suffering financial hardship, but on average, by the broadest measures of economic performance, America's Great Recession is over. Few nations across the Atlantic can say the same. The eurozone slipped back into recession in 2012 for the second time in four years, and remains in an economic state that can be accurately described as miserable. Real economic output among eurozone nations remains three percentage points below its 2008 peak. Eurozone unemployment sits near twelve percent in late 2013, higher than the US ever experienced at the peak of its recession. These problems are as deeply human as they are economic or political. Each percentage point rise in Europe's unemployment rate has boosted its suicide rate by 0.79 percent, according to a study published in the medical journal the Lancet.
`In' analytical NoteWorld Affairs US Vol.176, No.5; Jan-Feb 2014: p.38-46
Journal SourceWorld Affairs US Vol.176, No.5; Jan-Feb 2014: p.38-46
Key WordsUS Bureau of Economic Analysis - USBEA ;  Inflation ;  Economic Growth ;  Gross Domestic Product ;  United States - US ;  Eurozone ;  Economic Performance ;  Financial Hardship ;  Political Economy ;  Great Economic Recession ;  Economic Output ;  European Union - EU