Money | eurozone Eurozone Falls Back Into Recession GDP falls for the second quarter in a row By Kevin Spak Posted Nov 15, 2012 12:11 PM CST Copied In this July 31, 2012 file photo the euro sculpture stands in front of the headquarters of the European Central Bank, ECB, in Frankfurt, Germany. (AP Photo/Michael Probst, File) The eurozone officially has a double-dip recession on its hands. The 17-nation euro bloc fell into that second dip in the third quarter, with GDP falling 0.1%, the European Union's statistics office announced today. Since that marks its second straight quarter of decline—it was down 0.2% in the second quarter—it's officially a recession. But economists had widely predicted the decline, Bloomberg reports, and some were surprised it wasn't any worse. "Overall I think it’s remarkable that we haven’t seen … a stronger decrease in economic activity considering the strength of the eurozone debt crisis," one economist said. And some of the eurozone's stronger economies are still in the black; German GDP rose 0.2%, as did France's, rebounding from a 0.1% decrease last quarter. Read These Next More pics have reportedly emerged from Guthrie home cameras. Sheriff in Guthrie case says he may have a motive, and a warning. North Korea just reportedly fired 10 missiles toward the sea. In Japan, a disturbing 'reflection of modern society.' Report an error