The Housing Market Needs More Than Low Mortgage Rates

A home for sale in Cambridge, Mass. Housing prices have risen faster than wages in much of the country in recent years. AP
A home for sale in Cambridge, Mass. Housing prices have risen faster than wages in much of the country in recent years. AP
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The Housing Market Needs More Than Low Mortgage Rates

A home for sale in Cambridge, Mass. Housing prices have risen faster than wages in much of the country in recent years. AP
A home for sale in Cambridge, Mass. Housing prices have risen faster than wages in much of the country in recent years. AP

The Federal Reserve is hoping that its latest interest-rate cut will help keep the economy safely at cruising altitude. But don’t expect it to provide much of a lift to the housing market.

Housing is one of the pathways by which Fed policy produces results. When the central bank cuts interest rates, it encourages people to buy houses (since mortgages are cheaper) and builders to ramp up construction (since demand is strong and borrowing is easier). Those decisions then ripple through the economy, as people buy furniture, builders hire workers and brokers cash their commission checks.

But housing isn’t the engine it once was. The sector is a smaller part of the economy than before the financial crisis, and a smaller share of Americans are homeowners. And with rates already low, it isn’t clear that a further cut by the Fed will do much for housing — if it lowers mortgage rates at all. (More about that in a minute.)

Interest rates still matter for housing. The Fed’s first two rate cuts this year helped stabilize the housing market, which had been heading for a major slump. On Wednesday, the Commerce Department said that construction added to gross domestic product in the third quarter after six quarters of contraction. And lower rates could give another jolt to a refinancing boom that has injected billions of dollars into the economy in recent months.

But few economists expect the housing market to take off in response to this week’s rate cut, because rates aren’t what was holding back housing in the first place. Instead, they point to other factors.

Interest rates don’t matter if no one will give you a loan in the first place. And a lot of would-be buyers are in that situation.

After the housing bubble burst over a decade ago, banks and other financial institutions became far more cautious in their lending, partly because of new federal rules meant to discourage risky loans. No one wants a return of the bubble-era “liar loans,” for which borrowers were allowed to state their income without verification. But some argue that the pendulum has swung too far the other way.

The typical home buyer today has a FICO credit score of 741, compared with 700 before the housing crisis, according to data from the Urban Institute. Hardly any buyers have a score below 650. Other measures of affordability likewise show that lending standards have loosened a bit in recent years but remain tighter than in the early 2000s, before the subprime lending boom.

“There are a lot of people that have the income to afford their payments, they could be responsible homeowners, but they may have a lower FICO score, they may have a smaller down payment, and that really holds them back,” said Melissa Stegman, a lawyer at the Center for Responsible Lending, an advocacy group.

Jewell Handy has a steady income as a teacher, money for a down payment and even a history of successful homeownership. But when she decided to buy a house for herself and her mother in Houston this summer, she discovered that she couldn’t get a conventional mortgage. The reason: a credit score in the mid-600s because of an old issue with a student loan.

Ms. Handy eventually got approval for a more expensive loan through the Federal Housing Administration. But with a week left before the sale is scheduled to close, she is still fielding paperwork requests from her lender, and she isn’t sure the loan will go through.

“They’re somehow not confident in my finances, but I don’t really understand why,” she said.

Tight lending standards disproportionately affect African-Americans like Ms. Handy. Black workers earn less on average than white workers, and they are less likely to have well-to-do family members who can help with a down payment. The homeownership rate among black Americans tumbled during the housing market’s collapse and has barely recovered, even as whites and other racial groups have made progress.

Glenn Kelman, chief executive of the online brokerage Redfin, said the combination of low interest rates and tight lending standards was exacerbating existing economic divides.

“Right now, money’s really cheap, but you have to have a good credit score to be able to access it,” he said. “It’s been a bonanza for one group of people, the people who have always been able to get credit.”

It’s hard to find a house to buy (at least one you can afford).

Housing prices have risen faster than wages in much of the country in recent years. And many cities, particularly on the coasts, are in the midst of a full-blown affordability crisis. In cities like San Francisco, Seattle and Boston, the median price of a home listed for sale is well over half a million dollars, according to the real estate site Zillow, and even starter homes can top $300,000 — if there are any available.

At those prices, a modest dip in interest rates will hardly make a difference, said Susan M. Wachter, a professor of real estate at the University of Pennsylvania.

“This interest-rate decline will not do it — it will not turn these potential owners into buyers,” she said.



US Plans to Impose Major New Tariffs on EVs, other Chinese Green Energy Imports

 A worker checks solar panels at a factory in Jiujiang in central China’s Jiangxi province on March 16, 2018. The Biden administration is planning to announce new tariffs on electric vehicles, semiconductors, solar equipment and medical supplies imported from China. (Chinatopix via AP)
A worker checks solar panels at a factory in Jiujiang in central China’s Jiangxi province on March 16, 2018. The Biden administration is planning to announce new tariffs on electric vehicles, semiconductors, solar equipment and medical supplies imported from China. (Chinatopix via AP)
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US Plans to Impose Major New Tariffs on EVs, other Chinese Green Energy Imports

 A worker checks solar panels at a factory in Jiujiang in central China’s Jiangxi province on March 16, 2018. The Biden administration is planning to announce new tariffs on electric vehicles, semiconductors, solar equipment and medical supplies imported from China. (Chinatopix via AP)
A worker checks solar panels at a factory in Jiujiang in central China’s Jiangxi province on March 16, 2018. The Biden administration is planning to announce new tariffs on electric vehicles, semiconductors, solar equipment and medical supplies imported from China. (Chinatopix via AP)

The Biden administration plans to impose major new tariffs on electric vehicles, semiconductors, solar equipment and medical supplies imported from China, according to a US official and another person familiar with the plan.

Tariffs on electric vehicles, in particular, could quadruple — from the existing 25% to 100%. The plan was described by the people on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to provide details ahead of a formal announcement.

The tariffs, expected to be announced Tuesday, come as officials across the Democratic administration have expressed frustration over China's manufacturing “overcapacity” of EVs and other products that they say pose a threat to US jobs and national security.

Industrialized nations including the United States and its European allies fear a wave of low-priced Chinese exports will overwhelm domestic manufacturing.

According to The AP, on the US side, there is particular concern that China’s green energy products will undermine massive climate-friendly investments made through the Democrats’ Inflation Reduction Act that President Joe Biden signed into law in August 2022.

The additional tariffs also carry some political heft going into the November presidential election. Both Biden and his presumptive Republican challenger, former President Donald Trump, have told voters that they'll be tough on China, the world's second largest economy after the United States and an emerging geopolitical rival.

Biden has defined his policy as “competition with China, not conflict.” He has embraced an industrial strategy that has used government financial support to pull in private investment in new factories and advanced technology, while limiting the selling of computer chips and other equipment to China.

Trump has floated the idea of levying massive tariffs against China in order to reduce the US trade deficit with that country. He has repeatedly claimed that Biden's support for EVs would ultimately cause American factory jobs to go to China.

Tuesday's announcement is expected to keep in place some tariffs that were imposed during Trump's administration, covering about $360 billion in Chinese goods. The new tax on imports would add products such as Chinese syringes and solar equipment.

There is the risk that tariffs could lead to a broader trade conflict between the two countries as they respond to each other's moves. China is seeking to create a technological edge and move up the economic chain.

There are some indications that China is cooling its production of lithium-ion batteries used in EVs, cell phones and other consumer electronics at a time when it is facing increasing criticism from the West.


European Companies are Less Upbeat About China’s Vast Market as its Economy Slows

President of the European Union Chamber of Commerce in China Jens Eskelund speaks during a press conference for European Chamber in Beijing, China, Friday, May 10, 2024. China is actively seeking foreign investment to boost its slowing growth, but that very sluggishness is weighing on company plans to grow their businesses in the world’s second largest economy, an annual survey of more than 500 European companies has found. (AP Photo/Ng Han Guan) (Ng Han Guan / Associated Press)
President of the European Union Chamber of Commerce in China Jens Eskelund speaks during a press conference for European Chamber in Beijing, China, Friday, May 10, 2024. China is actively seeking foreign investment to boost its slowing growth, but that very sluggishness is weighing on company plans to grow their businesses in the world’s second largest economy, an annual survey of more than 500 European companies has found. (AP Photo/Ng Han Guan) (Ng Han Guan / Associated Press)
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European Companies are Less Upbeat About China’s Vast Market as its Economy Slows

President of the European Union Chamber of Commerce in China Jens Eskelund speaks during a press conference for European Chamber in Beijing, China, Friday, May 10, 2024. China is actively seeking foreign investment to boost its slowing growth, but that very sluggishness is weighing on company plans to grow their businesses in the world’s second largest economy, an annual survey of more than 500 European companies has found. (AP Photo/Ng Han Guan) (Ng Han Guan / Associated Press)
President of the European Union Chamber of Commerce in China Jens Eskelund speaks during a press conference for European Chamber in Beijing, China, Friday, May 10, 2024. China is actively seeking foreign investment to boost its slowing growth, but that very sluggishness is weighing on company plans to grow their businesses in the world’s second largest economy, an annual survey of more than 500 European companies has found. (AP Photo/Ng Han Guan) (Ng Han Guan / Associated Press)

China is actively seeking foreign investment to boost its slowing growth, but that very sluggishness is weighing on company plans to expand their businesses in the world's second largest economy, an annual survey of more than 500 European companies found, The AP reported.

The slowing economy is now the dominant concern of respondents to the European Chamber of Commerce in China survey, which was released Friday. China still ranks high as a place to invest, but the share of companies considering an expansion of their operations in the country this year fell to 42%, the lowest ever recorded.

“The business outlook is the most pessimistic yet, with companies’ expectations for growth and profitability taking a hit, and concerns about competition intensifying,” the chamber said in its business confidence survey.

The economic worries are layered on top of long-running complaints about regulations and practices that companies say favor their Chinese competitors or are unclear, creating uncertainty for them and their employees. Others including the American Chamber in China have expressed similar concerns.

Those older issues are now compounded by the weaker economy, eroding business confidence, said Jens Eskelund, the president of the European Chamber.

“Companies are beginning to realize that some of these pressures that we have seen in the local market, whether it’s competition, whether it’s low demand, that they are taking on perhaps a more permanent nature,” he told journalists earlier this week. “And that is something that is beginning to impact investment decisions and the way they go about thinking about development of the local market.”

The government is launching programs to boost consumer spending but confidence remains low because of a weak job market. Economic growth came in at a faster-than-expected 5.3% annual pace in the first three months of the year, but much of the GDP growth came from government spending on infrastructure and investment in factories and equipment.

Massive investment in industries such as solar power panels and electric cars has created intense price competition, squeezing profits. More than a third of the survey respondents said they have observed overcapacity in their industry. For 15% of the companies, their China operations finished 2023 in the red. Foreign companies need growth in domestic demand, not manufacturing capacity, Eskelund said.

“What is important to foreign companies is not necessarily sort of a headline GDP number — 5.3%, whatever — but the composition of GDP,” he said.

Close to 40% of companies said they have moved or are considering moving future investments out of China. Southeast Asia and Europe are the biggest beneficiaries, followed by India and North America. Nearly 60% said they are sticking with their investment plans for China, but that was down from last year.

“It’s not that companies are giving up on China, it’s just that we are beginning to see other countries emerging as a serious competitor to China,” Eskelund said Friday.

The survey report said “China’s allure as a top investment destination is fading” and warned that companies will pursue opportunities elsewhere unless there are improvements in the business environment.

The proportion of companies that are optimistic about expanding their China business this year fell to about one-third, down from more than half in 2023. Only 15% were optimistic about profit growth.

More than half expect to cut costs in China this year, including 26% who plan to reduce the size of their staffs — which the report said "will further increase the pressure on an already strained job market.”


ECB Set Scene for June Rate Cut at Last Meeting

A view shows the logo of the European Central Bank (ECB) outside its headquarters in Frankfurt, Germany March 16, 2023. REUTERS/Heiko Becker/File Photo Purchase Licensing Rights
A view shows the logo of the European Central Bank (ECB) outside its headquarters in Frankfurt, Germany March 16, 2023. REUTERS/Heiko Becker/File Photo Purchase Licensing Rights
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ECB Set Scene for June Rate Cut at Last Meeting

A view shows the logo of the European Central Bank (ECB) outside its headquarters in Frankfurt, Germany March 16, 2023. REUTERS/Heiko Becker/File Photo Purchase Licensing Rights
A view shows the logo of the European Central Bank (ECB) outside its headquarters in Frankfurt, Germany March 16, 2023. REUTERS/Heiko Becker/File Photo Purchase Licensing Rights

Euro zone inflation remains on track to fall back to 2% next year, so European Central Bank policymakers will likely start cutting interest rates from a record high in June, the account of their April meeting showed on Friday.

The ECB left interest rates unchanged last month but made clear that its next move will be a cut, most likely on June 6, provided wage and inflation data stay on their current, relatively benign path.

"It was seen as plausible that the Governing Council would be in a position to start easing monetary policy restriction at the June," the ECB said in the account of the April 10-11 meeting.

Policymakers appeared so confident about the outlook that some even made the case to start easing in April, a suggestion eventually overruled by a wide majority, who argued for patience until more wage and price data came in.

The few dissenters argued, as ECB President Christine Lagarde described last month, that ECB rates will continue to restrict the economy even after an initial cut, so past policy tightening will continue to work through the economy.

Speaking in the weeks since the April meeting, policymakers have confirmed that the June 6 cut is all but a done deal but the rate path beyond that is uncertain, given inflation volatility and a possible delay by the US Federal Reserve to its own rate cuts.

Most, however, argue that June will not be a singular, one-off cut, even if the timing for further moves should not be predetermined in advance, to give policymakers flexibility in the case of abrupt changes in economic conditions.

In another small shift in the bank's message, policymakers now see the cost of undershooting the inflation target on a par with overshooting, a reversal for many who argued that too rapid price growth was the bigger risk.

"The risk of undershooting the inflation target and eventually having to pay too high a price in terms of declining activity was now seen as being at least as high as the risk of acting too early and overshooting the target over the medium term," the ECB added.

Markets now see up to three rate cuts this year, or two beyond June, most likely in September and December, when the ECB also publishes new economic projections.

Euro zone inflation held steady at 2.4% last month and is expected to oscillate around this level for the rest of the year before easing back to the ECB's 2% target in 2025.

Policymakers emphasized throughout the account that incoming data kept confirming the bank's own projections, which was increasing the ECB's confidence in the quality of forecasts after a few bumpy years when these figures were wide of the mark.

While the ECB has publicly declared that policy was not dependent on Fed moves, decisions taken by the world's biggest central bank impact financing conditions around the globe, limiting the ECB's freedom since a widening rate differential weakens the euro and pushes up imported inflation.


Gold Set for Best Week in Five

Production of gold at Novosibirsk precious metals plant·Reuters
Production of gold at Novosibirsk precious metals plant·Reuters
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Gold Set for Best Week in Five

Production of gold at Novosibirsk precious metals plant·Reuters
Production of gold at Novosibirsk precious metals plant·Reuters

Gold prices climbed on Friday, en route to their best week in five, with zero-yield bullion building on momentum fuelled by weaker US jobs data this week that reinforced expectations for interest rate cut by the Federal Reserve.

Spot gold rose 1% to $2,369.49 per ounce by 2:02 p.m. ET (1802 GMT).

US gold futures for June delivery settled 1.5% higher to $2,375.00 per ounce, Reuters reported.

Gold gained more than 1% on Thursday after data showed a bigger-than-expected rise in weekly claims for state unemployment benefits.

The surge in gold buying is mostly technically driven, but last week's payroll data and Thursday's initial unemployment claims data are lending support, said Phillip Streible, chief market strategist at Blue Line Futures.

"Concerns about the employment situation are oftentimes the first crack in the economy and could pull forward the Fed's first interest rate cut," Streible added.

Financial markets expect the US central bank to start easing its cycle in September.

Lower interest rates generally tend to boost the appeal of bullion since it pays no interest.

Investors are now looking forward to the US producer price index and consumer price index data due next week, both of which could significantly impact gold and silver prices.

"If we get hot inflation or even warm inflation data next week, that's going to throw cold water on any notions that the Fed might be able to cut interest rates as soon as September," said Jim Wyckoff, senior market analyst with Kitco.

Meanwhile, near-record domestic prices stifled demand for physical gold in India, the world's second-biggest consumer, during a key festival.

Spot silver fell 0.2% to $28.27 per ounce, while spot platinum rose 1.9% to $997.40 per ounce and spot palladium gained 1.1% to $977.75 per ounce.


Saudi Arabia, Nigeria Explore Agricultural, Food Security Cooperation Opportunities

Photo by SPA
Photo by SPA
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Saudi Arabia, Nigeria Explore Agricultural, Food Security Cooperation Opportunities

Photo by SPA
Photo by SPA

The Saudi Minister of Environment, Water, and Agriculture Eng. Abdulrahman Alfadley, accompanied by his delegation, engaged in discussions with the Nigerian Minister of Agriculture and Food Security, Sen. Abubakar Kyari.

Their talks focused on identifying investment opportunities within agriculture and food security sectors and exploring avenues to enhance trade and economic collaboration between the two countries.
During the meeting, the focus was on cooperation in diverse sectors, with a particular emphasis on collaborations in agriculture, as well as food security. The meeting included discussions on investment possibilities and the available agricultural resources and food products, SPA reported.
In November 2023, Saudi Arabia hosted the Saudi-African Summit, which aimed to foster relations and promote collaborative efforts between the Kingdom and African states.


Local, Int’l Partnerships Enhance Market Access for Saudi Products

Saudi EXIM Bank participated in the Riyadh International Industry Week 2024 (Photo: Turki Al-Aqili)
Saudi EXIM Bank participated in the Riyadh International Industry Week 2024 (Photo: Turki Al-Aqili)
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Local, Int’l Partnerships Enhance Market Access for Saudi Products

Saudi EXIM Bank participated in the Riyadh International Industry Week 2024 (Photo: Turki Al-Aqili)
Saudi EXIM Bank participated in the Riyadh International Industry Week 2024 (Photo: Turki Al-Aqili)

The Riyadh International Industry Week 2024 concluded on Thursday with the signing of a number of local and international partnerships and agreements, with the aim to promote the access of Saudi products to global markets.
The Saudi Exports Development Authority signed a memorandum of understanding with the Ministry of Industry and Mineral Resources, with the aim to support local industries and facilitate their access to international markets.
The MOU highlights potential areas of cooperation and seeks to encourage firms that are listed in the Future Factories Program to export their products worldwide.
Meanwhile, Alod Company (a Saudi global shipping gateway) signed an agreement with the National Parcel Stations Network Company (Parcelat) to enable its customers to receive and deliver shipments around the clock.
Alod also signed an agreement with Camion aimed at enabling the latter’s customers to automate international and local shipping operations.
Meanwhile, the Saudi Export and Import Bank was able to find credit solutions exceeding SAR 10 billion ($2.6 billion) during the first 4 months of 2024.
The CEO of the Saudi Export-Import Bank, Eng. Saad Al-Khalab, said that the bank seeks to achieve a fourfold increase of the 2024 target number by 2030.
The Saudi Export and Import Bank, which was established in February 2020, aims to promote the development and diversification of national non-oil exports and increase their competitiveness, by providing export financing, guarantee, and export credit insurance services with competitive advantages.
Speaking to Asharq Al-Awsat on the sidelines of the Riyadh International Industry Week 2024, Al-Khalab said that the bank offered many products that help Saudi exporters expand globally and reduce their export risks, which facilitates their access to new markets.

 


Saudi Arabia, Hong Kong to Establish Fund to Track Stock Indices

CEO of the Saudi Tadawul Group, Khalid Al-Hussan (Asharq Al-Awsat)
CEO of the Saudi Tadawul Group, Khalid Al-Hussan (Asharq Al-Awsat)
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Saudi Arabia, Hong Kong to Establish Fund to Track Stock Indices

CEO of the Saudi Tadawul Group, Khalid Al-Hussan (Asharq Al-Awsat)
CEO of the Saudi Tadawul Group, Khalid Al-Hussan (Asharq Al-Awsat)

The first global edition of the Capital Markets Forum, organized by the Saudi Tadawul Group and the Hong Kong Exchanges and Clearing Limited (HKEX), kicked off in Hong Kong on Thursday, in the presence of over 650 people from around the world, including financial leaders, investors and representatives of regulators and enterprises.
The forum highlights the Hong Kong stock exchange operator’s latest strategy to attract new investors, with the aim to replace stockholders from the United States and Europe who may be deterred from doing business in China at a time of rising geopolitical tensions. Last month, the country's securities regulator said that it would encourage more companies to hold IPOs in the city.
The forum discusses important investment prospects through global partnerships and the means to exploit investment opportunities in the Kingdom and China, as well as studying future investment portfolios.
At the opening of the forum, the CEO of the Saudi Tadawul Group, Khalid Al-Hussan, said that the decision to host the Capital Markets Forum in Hong Kong demonstrates the growing relationship between Saudi Arabia and Asia, adding that the event would constitute a major bridge for investors from the two countries and pave the way for a more integrated system of global capital markets.
“The convergence between Hong Kong’s technological development and the Kingdom’s ambitious economic diversification enables a new era of knowledge exchange and cooperation that extends beyond the capital markets,” he stated.
Al-Hussan explained that during the forum, more than a thousand investors from listed companies and financial industry leaders will gather to explore challenges and prospects in the field of sustainability, innovation, and global investment trends.
For her part, Hong Kong Exchanges & Clearing Ltd. CEO Bonnie Chan said that she expects large initial public offerings (IPOs) to return to the city with the improvement of basic conditions and the support of Chinese regulators.
In her speech during the opening ceremony, she said that the Hong Kong Stock Exchange received more than 100 new listing applications this year, with activity rebounding, especially after the support measures taken by China.
Hong Kong has returned to the radar of global investments, after the China Securities Regulatory Commission (CSRC) announced last month that it would facilitate IPOs in Hong Kong by leading Chinese companies. The regulatory body also announced the expansion of the cross-border investment scheme to strengthen the city’s position as an international financial center.
The new measures began to attract money flows into the market, and trading value rose, Chan underlined, which she said created a more favorable environment for companies to launch their IPOs.
The Hong Kong Stock Exchange has had a difficult time in recent years. The faltering Chinese economy and increasing disputes between Beijing and Washington have exhausted investor interest in China-linked stocks.
Meanwhile, Hong Kong Deputy Financial Secretary Michael Wong said in a statement on Thursday that Hong Kong and Saudi Arabia are exploring the creation of an exchange-traded fund (ETF) tracking Hong Kong indices.
He added that the Hong Kong government is currently working with several financial institutions to develop the ETF.
Wong also reaffirmed Hong Kong’s commitment to its partnership with Saudi Arabia, noting that Cathay Pacific Airways is expected to re-launch direct passenger flights between Hong Kong and Riyadh.


Greece to Bring in Egyptian Farm Workers Amid Labor Shortage

FILE PHOTO: Passengers of a flight from Amsterdam arrive at the international airport in Athens, Greece, June 15, 2020. REUTERS/Alkis Konstantinidis/File Photo
FILE PHOTO: Passengers of a flight from Amsterdam arrive at the international airport in Athens, Greece, June 15, 2020. REUTERS/Alkis Konstantinidis/File Photo
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Greece to Bring in Egyptian Farm Workers Amid Labor Shortage

FILE PHOTO: Passengers of a flight from Amsterdam arrive at the international airport in Athens, Greece, June 15, 2020. REUTERS/Alkis Konstantinidis/File Photo
FILE PHOTO: Passengers of a flight from Amsterdam arrive at the international airport in Athens, Greece, June 15, 2020. REUTERS/Alkis Konstantinidis/File Photo

Greece will start bringing in workers from Egypt this summer to take on temporary farming jobs under a deal between the countries to tackle a labor shortage, the migration ministry said on Friday.
After a decade of pain, the Greek economy is forecast to grow nearly 3% this year, far outpacing the euro zone average of 0.8%, Reuters reported.
But an exodus of workers during Greece's economic crisis, a shrinking population and strict migration rules have left the country struggling to find tens of thousands of workers to fill vacancies in farming, tourism, construction and other sectors.
Greece will take in around 5,000 seasonal farm workers under the 2022 deal signed with Egypt.
The countries have discussed expanding the "mutually beneficial" scheme to the Greek construction and tourism sectors, the Greek Migration Ministry said in a statement.


UK Exits Recession with Fastest Growth in Nearly Three Years

A general view shows Palace of Westminster, home to the Houses of Parliament, and the Elizabeth Tower, commonly known by the name of the bell "Big Ben", in London on June 15, 2023. (Photo by Daniel LEAL / AFP)
A general view shows Palace of Westminster, home to the Houses of Parliament, and the Elizabeth Tower, commonly known by the name of the bell "Big Ben", in London on June 15, 2023. (Photo by Daniel LEAL / AFP)
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UK Exits Recession with Fastest Growth in Nearly Three Years

A general view shows Palace of Westminster, home to the Houses of Parliament, and the Elizabeth Tower, commonly known by the name of the bell "Big Ben", in London on June 15, 2023. (Photo by Daniel LEAL / AFP)
A general view shows Palace of Westminster, home to the Houses of Parliament, and the Elizabeth Tower, commonly known by the name of the bell "Big Ben", in London on June 15, 2023. (Photo by Daniel LEAL / AFP)

Britain's economy grew by the most in nearly three years in the first quarter of 2024, ending the shallow recession it entered in the second half of last year and delivering a boost to Prime Minister Rishi Sunak ahead of an election.
The Office for National Statistics said gross domestic product expanded by 0.6% in the three months to March, the strongest growth since the fourth quarter of 2021 when it rose by 1.5%.
The first-quarter growth exceeded all forecasts in a Reuters poll of 39 economists which had pointed to a 0.4% expansion of gross domestic product in the January-to-March period, after GDP shrank by 0.3% in the final quarter of 2023.
Friday's data was welcomed by Sunak who said the economy had "turned a corner", although the opposition Labor Party, which has a large lead in opinion polls, accused Sunak and finance minister Jeremy Hunt of being out of touch.
"There is no doubt it has been a difficult few years, but today's growth figures are proof that the economy is returning to full health for the first time since the pandemic," Hunt said.
But the opposition Labor Party rejected those claims.
"This is no time for Conservative ministers to be doing a victory lap and telling the British people that they have never had it so good," said Labor's Rachel Reeves, who hopes to succeed Hunt as finance minister.
The Bank of England, which held interest rates at a 16-year high on Thursday, forecast quarterly growth of 0.4% for the first quarter of this year and a smaller 0.2% rise for the second quarter.
Sterling strengthened against the US dollar after Friday's ONS figures were released.
TURNING A CORNER?
On a monthly basis, the economy grew by 0.4% in March, faster than the 0.1% growth forecast by economists in a Reuters poll, reflecting strength in retail, public transport, haulage and health - partly due to fewer public-sector strikes.
Car manufacturing also performed well, offset by continued weakness in construction, the ONS said.
Friday's data also showed that GDP in March was 0.7% higher than a year earlier, and above all economists' expectations of a 0.3% rise.
However, Britain has still had one of the slowest recoveries from the effects of the coronavirus pandemic.
At the end of the first quarter of 2024, the country's economy was just 1.7% bigger than its level in late 2019, before the pandemic, with only Germany among the G7 faring worse.
"Despite the better near-term outlook, the improvement in GDP growth looks likely to be constrained by the ongoing weakness in productivity growth as well as reduced scope to increase employment levels," Yael Selfin, chief economist at KPMG UK, said.
GDP per head rose for the first time in two years in the first quarter, up 0.4%, but was 0.7% lower than a year earlier, highlighting the ongoing squeeze on living standards and Britain's struggle to boost productivity.
"In per capita terms, it could be said that UK households have seen little meaningful improvement in living standards in the last two years," Gora Suri, economist at PwC, said.


Israel Budget Deficit Hits 7%/GDP in April

Israeli soldiers in the Gaza Strip amid the ongoing conflict between Israel and Hamas (Reuters)
Israeli soldiers in the Gaza Strip amid the ongoing conflict between Israel and Hamas (Reuters)
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Israel Budget Deficit Hits 7%/GDP in April

Israeli soldiers in the Gaza Strip amid the ongoing conflict between Israel and Hamas (Reuters)
Israeli soldiers in the Gaza Strip amid the ongoing conflict between Israel and Hamas (Reuters)

Israel posted a budget deficit of 11.7 billion shekels ($3.1 billion) in April, the Finance Ministry said on Thursday, citing higher spending as a result of Israel's war with Palestinian Islamist group Hamas in Gaza.

Over the prior 12 months, the deficit rose to 7.0% of gross domestic product in April versus 6.2% in March and topping a target of 6.6% for all of 2024, Reuters reported.

Tax revenue has also fallen 4.1% the first four months of the year, with tax income down 13.1% in April alone.