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RTRS:Euro zone inflation off 3-yr lows, fall in employment deepens
 
* Inflation off 3-yr lows in May to 1.4 pct
* Consumer prices still well below ECB target
* Euro zone malaise seen in deeper drop in Q1 jobs

By Martin Santa
BRUSSELS, June 14 (Reuters) - Prices of electricity, fruit
and vegetables lifted the euro zone inflation off its three-year
low in May, while the single currency bloc's record high jobless
rate showed in its deepening inability to create jobs in the
first quarter.
Economic recovery in the euro area is expected to kick in
later this year, but risks to the growth are on the downside as
governments continue with painful fiscal consolidation and
companies struggle to access credit in banks.
Consumer prices rose by 0.1 percent on the month in May, the
EU statistic agency Eurostat said, putting the annual inflation
rate at 1.4 percent compared to 1.2 percent in April.
Inflation in the euro zone's strongest economy, Germany,
jumped to 1.6 percent on the year in May from 1.1 percent in
April, while France recorded only a small increase and Italy
stayed flat at 1.3 percent.
Euro zone inflation has declined markedly over the last few
months and is well under the European Central Bank's (ECB)
target of close to, but below 2 percent. The bank said in June
it sees inflation risks as broadly balanced.
The ECB left key interest rates unchanged in May, slightly
lowered its growth outlook and discussed a raft of other policy
options it could take if the euro zone economy does not emerge
from recession later this year.
The euro zone's malaise was clearly visible in a 0.5 percent
drop in employment first three months of the year, Eurostat data
showed, reflecting the unemployment rate that reached a new high
in April, with 19.4 million people out of work.
Source