Southern European economies are doing better than their northern counterparts, a reversal driven in part by austerity programs in formerly troubled markets.

Spain’s economy has grown 3.5% this year, and Greece 2.3%, compared to France’s 0.7% and Germany’s 0.2%. The north’s deficits are growing, albeit from a lower base, while the south’s are shrinking.

That success is driven partly by tourism — Greece and Cyprus are seeing construction booms — and efforts to attract investment and impose austerity, while the north is finding it politically difficult to reduce spending...

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