The weak eurozone economy poses a key threat to global growth, the OECD warned today, urging more flexibility in fiscal rules for struggling EU members like France and Italy to prevent another recession.
Forcing the two major European economies to meet the EU's tough deficit criteria "would likely depress activity further and even risk tipping the euro area into another recession," it said.
France and Italy's "slower pace of structural fiscal adjustment... Proposed in their 2015 budget plans seems appropriate," said the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development, which provides economic analysis and advice to its 34 industrialised members.
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The Commission was expected to deliver the detailed opinions next Thursday or Friday, but will now only give an initial verdict without getting into next steps, the EU source said.
The decision, to be approved by the Commission later today, risks angering an impatient Germany, frustrated with the slow pace of reform in Paris and Rome.
Last month, France and Italy barely avoided having their budgets humiliatingly sent back for serious breaches.
According to the plans, the Commission will divide eurozone countries into groups, with France and Italy, but also Spain and Portugal, identified as non-compliant of the EU's budgetary rules.
Unveiling the report today, OECD chief economist Catherine Mann questioned whether Berlin could take the high ground on reforms, saying: "Neither France nor Germany have done much in terms of structural reforms."
The OECD lowered its forecast for global growth this year by a tenth of a percentage point to 3.3 per cent. For 2015 it cut the forecast by two tenths of a point to 3.7 per cent growth.
The OECD left in place its forecast for the 18-nation eurozone to expand by 0.8 per cent this year and by 1.1 per cent in 2015.
"Growth is set to be stronger in the United States and the United Kingdom than in the euro area and Japan," the report said, adding that unemployment "will remain particularly high in the euro area".
Among the emerging economies, "growth will edge down in China, remain weak in Russia and Brazil, but will recover steadily in India, Indonesia and South Africa," it said.
"This macroeconomic prognosis leaves us with a keen need for both continued supportive macroeconomic policy, as well as tailored structural reforms to raise both demand and supply throughout the global economy," it said.