Greek retail sales show strongest rebound in over two years

Greek retail sales rebounded in April, data showed on Monday, with Easter shopping helping to post the strongest rise in more than two years.

According to Reuters, retail sales by volume rose 7.3 percent year-on-year after a downwardly revised 1.2 percent drop in March, 
statistics service Elstat announced. Data showed the increase was driven mainly by strong apparel, footwear and supermarket sales.

Greek economic data have begun to show signs of a turnaround in recent months after a six-year recession that depressed incomes and drove down consumer spending. 

Elstat data showed April sales showed the highest percentage rise since the agency began tracking the figure in 2012, and National Bank economist Nikos Magginas said it represented the sharpest increase in more than four years.

“The improvement in consumer confidence, stronger tourism and the coincidence of the Orthodox and Catholic Easter holiday brought about the best retail sales reading since March 2010,” he said.

“Improved consumer confidence and the momentum in tourism should continue to positively affect consumer sales in the coming months.”

Hit by austerity policies imposed by EU/IMF international lenders who bailed out Greece, the economy has shrunk by almost a quarter over six years, suffering its most protracted recession since World War Two.

A key factor in the decline has been a 26 percent slump in household consumption as record unemployment and wage cuts slashed disposable incomes, with investment also falling sharply.

But first quarter gross domestic product data have shown a positive contribution from consumption, which rose 0.8 percent year-on-year, supporting projections that the economy will emerge from recession this year.
 
Athens and its international lenders expect private consumption to remain weak this year, despite an anticipated economic recovery of 0.6 percent, which is seen as driven by tourism, investment and exports.