Did you know that the Eurozone economies showed a modest
return to growth in the last quarter? If you read one of the right-leaning
papers, you could easily have missed the news. And even if your paper has let
you know, that will come with plenty of suggestions that you “look over there” at creatively
interpreted words from German Chancellor Angela Merkel. Or at the BBC.
So what has happened? Well, the Eurozone has
posted an overall growth of 0.3%, and so has the wider EU-28, which latter
includes the UK. Some Eurozone economies have contracted (Greece, Cyprus,
Italy, Spain and the Netherlands), while others have grown (Austria, France,
Germany, Finland and Portugal). This is the first quarter of overall Eurozone
growth in seven.
As not all Eurozone economies have grown, and there have
been warnings that one quarter is not in itself grounds for optimism, the BBC has reported
accordingly, with Europe editor Gavin Hewitt telling “What is unclear is whether the eurozone will be able to discover
significant growth or whether the zone will flat-line and stagnate”. This
has been summarily ignored by the Daily
Mail.
There, following
a report that gave more or less the same news as that from the hated Beeb,
Stephen “Miserable Git” Glover ranted
“Why
does the BBC sneer about Britain's recovery but go crazy if Euroland's corpse
so much as twitches?” followed by accusations that Evan Davis was
cheerleading, and – real pot and kettle stuff this – that Stephanie Flanders
was the Corporation’s “In-house doomster”.
Daily Mail Comment,
the authentic voice of the Vagina Monologue, went
further: “The BBC, an ideological
cheerleader for the one-size-fits-all single currency from the outset, may wish
to fool itself that everything is rosy. But, with Europe’s major banks
terrifyingly short of capital, youth unemployment at record levels and national
debts continuing to soar, nothing could be further from the truth”.
So the usual make-it-up-as-you-go-along drivel, then. What
of the Maily Telegraph? Yes, there
was a report on Eurozone growth, but finding it on the paper’s website this
morning proved elusive. The Tel prefers
Angela Merkel’s hint that some EU competencies may be given back to member
states, without noticing that, with elections coming up in Germany, this may
have been for domestic consumption.
And then there is the Express,
aka the Daily UKIP, with “Now
Germany may follow Britain by clawing powers back from the European Union”
(we ain’t clawed anything back, Express
people), and a cursory mention of Eurozone growth in the thirteenth and last
paragraph of Euro-basher Macer Hall’s piece. So the press either ignores it,
tries not to talk about it, or uses it to kick the BBC.
Just how “free and
fearless” is that? Er, not at all, thanks. No change there, then.
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