The January unadjusted jobless total of 4.62 million represents...

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    The January unadjusted jobless total of 4.62 million represents a jump of almost 400,000 since December.

    The news is the latest blow to Mr Schroeder, whose popularity has been battered by a string of gloomy economic data since he was re-elected in September.

    Federal Labour Office president Florian Gerster said the first signs of economic stabilisation had not yet appeared.

    Last week, Economics Minister Wolfgang Clement warned that he did not expect unemployment to fall below 4 million this year.

    The latest figures leave Germany second only to Spain in terms of European unemployment.

    The unemployment figures are only the latest in an extraordinary avalanche of economic bad news over the past few weeks.

    Retail sales fell in 2002, recording their worst performance for more than 20 years.

    Mr Clement has cut his growth forecast for this year to just 1%, after the 0.2% - Europe's weakest performance - recorded in 2002.

    And the budget deficit, which has aroused considerable concern among EU policy makers, shows no signs of abating and is certain to demand controversial tax increases.

    ----Well Tax increases will just make it worse thats part of the problem.----

    Political problems

    This prospect, combined with legislative muddle, has cost Mr Schroeder a huge amount of his political popularity.

    Over the weekend, his Social Democrat party was humiliated in elections in Hesse and Lower Saxony, his home state.

    Political opposition, and his reliance on support from opposition parliamentarians, has meant that his urgent reform programme has made no progress since September.

    Before the election, Mr Schroeder promised to reduce unemployment and kickstart growth with a sweeping programme of deregulation.

    Euro woes

    Trouble in Germany has a knock-on effect on the rest of Europe.

    Since Germany accounts for at least one-third of eurozone output, a slump there could have a direct effect on the performance of the euro, and the many countries that rely on German trade, aid and investment.

    And the Euro going up against the USD wont make it any easier.

    Interesting times.
 
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