Will The U.S. Avoid Eurozone’s Rising Double-Dip Recession Risk?

 | Oct 23, 2020 02:42PM ET

PMI survey data for October indicate that the Eurozone economy’s recovery is slipping into a new phase of contraction, due to a rebound in coronavirus infections and related blowback on business and consumer activity. The US economy appears more durable so far, although America is reporting a new rise in Covid-19 infections, which suggests that economic headwinds may rise in the third quarter.

For Europe, the die may already be cast, based on the October flash estimate of Composite PMI survey data. This proxy for GDP shows that the currency bloc’s economy slipped into contraction this month after a brief rebound from the initial phase of the coronavirus recession.

IHS Markit reports:

“Business activity fell back into decline across the Eurozone in October as accelerating growth of manufacturing output was overwhelmed by a steepening deterioration in the service sector amid rising Covid-19 worries. Germany was the only bright spot, as France and the rest of the region as a whole fell deeper into decline.”