FRANKFURT, Germany (AP) A key index of optimism about the German economy rose more than expected in November, underlining modestly improved prospects for the Europe's recovery.
The ZEW index rose to 54.6 points from 52.8 points in October. That is more than the 54.0 expected on average by analysts, and well above the index's long-term average of 24.1.
Clemens Fuest, who heads the ZEW or Center for European Economic Research, said Tuesday that "the slightly improved economic growth in the eurozone likely contributed to this."
The overall economy of the 17 countries that use the euro currency has shown modest growth for two quarters in a row after a long period of declining output. However, growth remained weak in the third quarter at only 0.1 percent. The European Central Bank cut interest rates Nov. 7 to try to strengthen the weak recovery.
Capital Economics chief European economist Jonathan Loynes said the survey "provided some evidence that the eurozone's biggest economy has continued to expand in the fourth quarter, but at a relatively moderate pace." Germany's economy, Europe's largest, slowed to quarterly growth of 0.3 percent in the third quarter from 0.7 percent in the previous three-month period..