Eurozone economy picks up pace
BRUSSELS: Eurozone business activity hit a four-and-a-half year high in November, helping create much-needed jobs in a broad-based upturn despite the impact on France of the Paris attacks, a key survey showed Monday. Data monitoring company Markit said its closely watched Composite Purchasing Managers Index rose to 54.4 points from
By our correspondents
November 24, 2015
BRUSSELS: Eurozone business activity hit a four-and-a-half year high in November, helping create much-needed jobs in a broad-based upturn despite the impact on France of the Paris attacks, a key survey showed Monday.
Data monitoring company Markit said its closely watched Composite Purchasing Managers Index rose to 54.4 points from 53.9 points in October, putting it well above the 50-point boom-or-bust line. Markit said "employment, new orders and backlogs of work indicators all signalled the strongest monthly expansions in four-and-a-half years."
"The survey data also highlighted the broad-based nature of the upturn."
Markit chief economist Chris Williamson said in the statement that the report was encouraging overall but noted the impact on France of the November 13 Paris attacks which left 130 people dead. "The improved performance in terms of economic growth and job creation seen in November are all the more impressive given last weekend´s tragic events in Paris, which subdued economic activity in France -- especially in the service sector," Williamson said.
For France, the Composite PMI fell sharply to 51.3 points, a three-month low, from 52.6 in October, Markit said in a separate report.
Data monitoring company Markit said its closely watched Composite Purchasing Managers Index rose to 54.4 points from 53.9 points in October, putting it well above the 50-point boom-or-bust line. Markit said "employment, new orders and backlogs of work indicators all signalled the strongest monthly expansions in four-and-a-half years."
"The survey data also highlighted the broad-based nature of the upturn."
Markit chief economist Chris Williamson said in the statement that the report was encouraging overall but noted the impact on France of the November 13 Paris attacks which left 130 people dead. "The improved performance in terms of economic growth and job creation seen in November are all the more impressive given last weekend´s tragic events in Paris, which subdued economic activity in France -- especially in the service sector," Williamson said.
For France, the Composite PMI fell sharply to 51.3 points, a three-month low, from 52.6 in October, Markit said in a separate report.
-
Heavy Snowfall Disrupts Operations At Germany's Largest Airport -
Andrew Mountbatten Windsor Released Hours After Police Arrest -
Heidi Klum Eyes Spooky Season Anthem With Diplo After Being Dubbed 'Queen Of Halloween' -
King Charles Is In ‘unchartered Waters’ As Andrew Takes Family Down -
Why Prince Harry, Meghan 'immensely' Feel 'relieved' Amid Andrew's Arrest? -
Jennifer Aniston’s Boyfriend Jim Curtis Hints At Tensions At Home, Reveals Rules To Survive Fights -
Shamed Andrew ‘dismissive’ Act Towards Royal Butler Exposed -
Hailey Bieber Shares How She Protects Her Mental Health While Facing Endless Criticism -
Queen Elizabeth II Saw ‘qualities Of Future Queen’ In Kate Middleton -
Amanda Seyfried Shares Hilarious Reaction To Discovering Second Job On 'Housemaid': 'Didn’t Sign Up For That' -
Hilary Duff Reveals Deep Fear About Matthew Koma Marriage -
Will Sarah Ferguson End Up In Police Questioning After Andrew’s Arrest? Barrister Answers -
Matthew McConaughey Gets Candid About AI Threat To Actors: 'Be Prepared' -
Hailey Bieber Shares How 16-month-old Son Jack Blues Is Already Following In Justin Bieber's Footsteps -
Zuckerberg Denies At LA Trial That 'Instagram Targets Kids' Amid Addiction Claims -
France Sees Record 102mn International Tourists In 2025