BRUSSELS (AP) The eurozone's debt burden rose further in the second quarter, official figures showed Wednesday, despite years of austerity that one prominent European Union economist says intensified the financial crisis.
Eurostat, the EU's statistics office, said debt across the 17 countries that use the euro rose to 93.4 percent of the eurozone's annual gross domestic product from 92.3 percent the previous quarter.
Though countries across the region, such as Greece and Spain, have made great strides in reducing their borrowing through spending cuts and tax increases, they're still running budget deficits that add to their stockpile of debt.
The eurozone's economy also isn't growing fast enough to help lower the debt figures measured relative to total GDP a sustained period of strong growth would help reduce the debt burden figures.
In absolute terms, the eurozone's debt pile grew to 8.87 trillion euros ($12.15 trillion) in the second quarter from 8.75 trillion euros in the first three months of the year. That's actually lower than the U.S.'s debt burden of about $17 trillion, a little over 100 percent of the country's GDP. The difference, though, is that the U.S. has a single fiscal policy controlled by one government, as opposed to the eurozone.