Global Economic Week Review: Kicking The Greek Can Down The Road

 | Jul 19, 2015 12:38AM ET

Obviously, the big news this past week was the Greek deal. This only delayed the inevitable. The plan calls for additional austerity measures, which have been completely ineffective.Greek unemployment is over 25%; the economy is in the middle of a depression, and the debt/GDP ratio increased from 105% in 2008 to 177% currently.

The country will simply continue on this path for the foreseeable future, leading to another inevitable conflict with the lending troika. The ECB also issued its policy statement this week, which kept rates unchanged.Here is how the bank described the current EU economic environment:

Euro area quarterly real GDP growth was confirmed at 0.4% in the first quarter of 2015, supported by contributions from private consumption and investment. … Looking ahead, we expect the economic recovery to broaden further. Domestic demand should be further supported by our monetary policy measures and their favourable impact on financial conditions, as well as by the progress made with fiscal consolidation and structural reforms. Moreover, the recent decline in oil prices should provide additional support for households’ real disposable income and corporate profitability and, therefore, private consumption and investment. Furthermore, demand for euro area exports should benefit from improvements in price competitiveness. However, the ongoing slowdown in emerging market economies continues to weigh on the global outlook and economic growth in the euro area is likely to continue to be dampened by the necessary balance sheet adjustments in a number of sectors and the sluggish pace of implementation of structural reforms.

Data has rebounded since the first of the year. The PMI surveys are positive and retail sales have risen.However, the latest industrial production number showed a .4% decline. While energy production decreased 3.2%, non-durable consumer goods also dropped 1.4%. As this accompanying chart shows, overall production has been weaker the last few months: