While near record low sovereign bond spreads and
near record high equity prices have been taken as vindication by the
European elites that all is well and 'we just need a little less fauxsterity' to be done with this crisis; the data, as it so often does, says the exact opposite. European unemployment just broke above 12% for the first time ever and European youth unemployment remains miserably above 24%. And while 1-in-4 under-25s unemployed is a bad enough statistic in terms of likely emergence of social unrest,
the individual countries are in general deteriorating once again at a
faster rate. French youth unemployment has risen for 13 months in a row
to a record 26.5%; Spain (at 57.2% of under-25s unemployed) is catching
up fast to Greece's stunning 59.1%; but perhaps the most concerning for
the broader economies is the fact that Italy's youth unemployment has now topped that of Portugal at 38.4%.
The only nation to see a drop in its youth unemployment was Ireland -
which fell back modestly to January levels. Not a rosy picture, but then
again, it doesn't matter...
Ugly...
and even worse for the youth...
but does it matter?
Charts: Bloomberg
Ugly...
and even worse for the youth...
but does it matter?
Charts: Bloomberg
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