LONDON (AP) Europe's debt dynamics keep getting worse in spite of years of cost-cutting and tax hikes designed to return public finances to health.
Official figures showed Monday that the debt burden of the 17 European Union countries that use the euro hit all-time highs at the end of the first quarter even after austerity measures were introduced to rebalance the governments' books.
Eurostat, the EU's statistics office, said government debt as a proportion of the total annual gross domestic product of the eurozone rose to a record 92.2 percent in the first quarter of 2013, from 90.6 percent the previous quarter and 88.2 percent in the same period a year ago.
Battered by a global recession, a banking crisis and in some cases lax financial management, a number of euro countries have been forced to take remedial action to deal with their debts, some in return for multibillion bailout loans.
Some progress has been made many countries' annual budget deficits are falling. Greece, for example, is expected to start posting economic growth next year while recording a primary surplus the annual budget excluding debt-related payments after years of savage austerity that's contributed to a near six-year recession and unemployment of around 27 percent.