Finland's economy makes surprise Q3 recovery

  • Businesses and schools have remained open and there are few restrictions on movement within the country's borders.
27 Nov, 2020

HELSINKI: Finland's GDP outperformed expectations in the third quarter, growing by 3.3 percent between July and September on the previous three months, official data showed on Friday.

The Nordic country, which has maintained one of Europe's lowest incidences of Covid-19, beat the forecast of 2.6 percent growth during the third quarter.

"Both the collapse in the second quarter and the recovery from it in the third quarter were more moderate in Finland than in the EU area," Statistics Finland said in a statement.

"The economy is doing much better in Finland compared to almost any central European country," Danske Bank economist Jukka Appelqvist told AFP.

Finland's second-quarter contraction was also revised from -4.5 percent to -3.9 percent on the previous quarter.

By comparison, the eurozone -- of which Finland is a member -- saw overall gross domestic product reduced by 15 percent during the period, according to Eurostat, weighed down by particularly sharp falls in France, Italy and Spain.

Finland has so far registered over 23,000 coronavirus infections and 393 deaths in the country of 5.5 million people, and since May has avoided many of the harsher restrictions seen elsewhere in Europe.

Businesses and schools have remained open and there are few restrictions on movement within the country's borders.

"It's nearly certain that the eurozone will contract noticeably in Q4 but in Finland we're expecting it closer to zero," Appelqvist said, adding that consumer behaviour has remained less impacted by the virus than in worse-hit countries.

The country's third-quarter GDP contracted by 2.7 percent on the same period in 2019, with the country's export-dependent economy particularly hit by the economic crisis across Europe.

However, on Thursday Prime Minister Sanna Marin warned that the virus has "worsened rapidly" in Finland in recent days, especially in the capital region, and refused to rule out a return to the strict controls introduced in March when a state of emergency was introduced and travel in and out of Helsinki forbidden.

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