The eurozone economy entered into a technical recession during the first three months of the year according to figures released by the EU's statistic agency, Eurostat.
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The data released on Thursday showed that there had been contraction of 0.1% for a second consecutive quarter.
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Eurostat revised down an earlier forecast that had predicted slight growth, after Germany said last month it had fallen into recession.
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Inflation and higher interest rates have lowered demand in the countries that use the euro as their currency.
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The latest figures also highlight the impact of the loss of Russian natural gas which caused energy prices to soar.
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The worse-than-expected figures casts doubt on more optimistic forecasts for the remainder of 2023.
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In May the European Commission predicted growth for the rest of the year across the Eurozone.
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Economic development in eurozone countries varied with Luxembourg achieving the strongest quarterly growth with 2.0% and Portugal with 1.6%.
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Sharp declines were registered in Ireland, with a drop of 4.6%, Lithuania was dow 2.1%, and Germany's quarterly GDP fell by 0.3%.
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Eurostat unemployment figures from March however show that European labor markets have been resilient to the economic barrage.
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Unemployment is at its lowest level since the creation of the euro in 1999, coming in at 6.5% in March.
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