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Jump in French industrial output and job creations

Manufacturing output surged to 2.6 percent year-on-year to January, while the 82,300 jobs created last year was highest since the crisis of 2007.

La rédaction de Mediapart

This article is freely available.

French industrial output reached its highest level in more than four years in January and job creation last year was the fastest since 2007, data showed on Thursday, reports Euronews.

Coming after Germany reported its fastest industrial output rise in six years this week, the data for the euro zone’s second-largest economy could temper concerns that a slowdown in emerging markets is spreading to the eurozone.

French industrial output rose 1.3 percent in January from December, beating the 0.8 percent economists expected on average, to reach its highest level since December 2011, figures from the INSEE statistics agency showed on Thursday.

“Today’s outcome marks a strong entry of industrial production into the quarter,” UniCredit economist Tullia Bucco said in a note.

The December figure was also revised up significantly to show a dip of 0.6 percent instead of the 1.6 percent decline previously reported, with INSEE saying it had revised seasonal adjustments and weights as well as the baseline year.

Manufacturing output, which strips out the impact of volatile energy production, rose by 0.8 percent in January and was up by a strong 2.6 percent over a year, especially in the transport, electronics and agro-food sectors.

A lower euro making French goods more competitive, cheap oil prices and the government’s 40-billion-euro (£31 billion) tax cut package are likely to have helped boost production.

Although recent surveys by the Bank of France and private pollster Markit have pointed to weaker sentiment in February, hard data has surprised on the upside.

“It dismisses to some extent the mixed message from business surveys up to February, especially the PMIs, which may have been affected by increased by financial market volatility,” Barclays economist François Cabau said.

In another encouraging sign for President François Hollande’s government, the statistics office revised up the number of jobs created last year to 82,300, from 47,100 previously, the highest since the global financial crisis of 2007-2008.

By contrast, France had lost 62,800 jobs in 2014.

Read more of this Reuters report published by Euronews.