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Official forecasts in parts of the world


On March 2009, U.S. Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke said in an interview that he felt that if banks began lending more freely, allowing the financial markets to return to normal, the recession could end during 2009.[146] On February 18, 2009, the US Federal Reserve cut their economic forecast of 2009, expecting the US output to shrink between 0.5% and 1.5%, down from its forecast in October 2008 of output between +1.1% (growth) and -0.2% (contraction).[147]
The EU commission in Brussels updated their earlier predictions on January 19, 2009, expecting Germany to contract -2.25 % and -1.8 % on average for the 27 EU countries.[148] According to new forecasts by Deutsche Bank (end of November 2008), the economy of Germany will contract by more than 4% in 2009.


On November 3, 2008, according to all newspapers, the European Commission in Brussels predicted for 2009 only an extremely low increase by 0.1% of the GDP, for the countries of the Euro zone (France, Germany, Italy, etc.).[150] They also predicted negative numbers for the UK (-1.0%), Ireland, Spain, and other countries of the EU. Three days later, the IMF at Washington, D.C., predicted for 2009 a worldwide decrease, -0.3%, of the same number, on average over the developed economies (-0.7% for the US, and -0.8% for Germany).[151] On April 22, 2009, the German ministers of finance and that of economy, in a common press conference, corrected again their numbers for 2009 downwards: this time the "prognosis" for Germany was a decrease of the GDP of at least -5 % [152], in agreement with a recent prediction of the IMF.


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