The European Central Bank announced a massive stimulus program to get the struggling
eurozone economy growing again.
Not exact matches
Our base - case scenario for the end of 2015 sees the
eurozone economy remaining more or less where it is now, not really
growing much or shrinking much either.
Tweet of the week: Since 2005, Britain's
economy has
grown by 2 %, the
eurozone's by 4 %, Brazil's by 25 %, India's by 47 % and China's by 69 % http://j.mp/fPfE18... from @plegrain.
«And instead of using the
eurozone crisis as an excuse for Britain's problems David Cameron must wake up to the fact that our
economy has not
grown for over a year and a half on his watch.
The IMF prognosed that the Spanish
economy would
grow 2.5 % in 2016, registering a point more than the rest of the advanced
economies and double that of the
Eurozone.