Eurozone economy regains size of 2008 but remains shaky

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LONDON — It’s been a long and tortuous journey, but the eurozone economy is finally back to the size it was before the global financial crisis.

LONDON — It’s been a long and tortuous journey, but the eurozone economy is finally back to the size it was before the global financial crisis.

The 19-country currency union, which as a bloc is the world’s second-largest economy, enjoyed an unexpected acceleration in the first three months of the year, when it expanded by a quarterly rate of 0.6 percent, official figures showed Friday.

That’s twice the previous quarter’s rate and means the economy is now bigger than it was at the start of 2008, before the financial crisis triggered the deepest global recession since World War II.

While the size of the eurozone economy has recovered, however, the region still has far to go to heal fully.

That’s most evident in the unemployment rate, which dipped to 10.2 percent in March but is still 3 percentage points higher than it was in 2008. The jobs problem remains particularly acute in countries like Greece and Spain that suffered the most financially. They have unemployment above 20 percent and about half of young jobseekers can’t get work.

Meanwhile, inflation is way too low for a healthy economy, and the banks in many countries are still burdened with bad loans that keep them from lending.

Since 2008, the eurozone has had a torrid time, falling in and out of recession as the global financial crisis morphed into a regional debt crisis that at various times threatened the future of the euro currency itself. As the region bailed out Greece and several other member states and required governments to make painful budget cuts, its economy struggled to get back on track.

By contrast, other economies like the U.S. and Britain recovered steadily. The U.S., for example, regained its pre-recession size back in 2011 and has seen unemployment fall sharply.

The acceleration in the eurozone’s growth in the first quarter of this year may be the clearest indication yet that the region is finally moving into a higher gear — particularly as it came during a period of high global uncertainty.

Financial markets were volatile due to worries that the Chinese economy would slow down sharply, dragging down global growth, and the price of oil tumbled to 12-year lows, raising concerns about the energy industry.

The eurozone’s first-quarter growth rate — reported by statistics agency Eurostat on Friday alongside the unemployment figure — was above market expectations for a 0.4 percent gain. The annualized rate of about 2.5 percent is way more than the U.S. equivalent of 0.5 percent in the same period.

Though no details were offered beyond the headline numbers, it seems that the eurozone — a net importer of crude — has benefited from the fall in oil prices. The fall in the value of the euro has also helped the region’s exporters, particularly in Germany.

The European Central Bank’s monetary stimulus measures appear to be helping to boost lending, which is vital to business activity and growth. And governments are less focused on budget cutbacks that tend to weigh on growth.

Whether the economy will keep expanding at this rate will depend on a number of factors, many of which are external to the eurozone, such as the British vote on June 23 on whether to leave the European Union and China’s performance.