FRANKFURT, Germany – Europe’s economy needs help – fast. Yet the two powers that could take action, the European Central Bank and Germany, don’t see eye to eye about what to do.

That leaves Europe’s currency union stuck in a dangerous policy limbo that has investors worried as it risks falling into recession for a third time in six years.

Concern that the 18-country currency union, which accounts for 17 percent of the world economy, has no clear path out of its economic trouble is among the key factors in this week’s global market turmoil. The Stoxx 50 index of top eurozone stocks fell as much as 6.3 percent this week before recovering somewhat Friday. It is down 5.7 percent over the past three months.

The eurozone saw no growth at all in the second quarter after only four quarters of sluggish recovery. It also has dangerously low inflation, which can depress growth over years, if not decades, as happened in Japan. A sudden decline in exports and industrial activity in Germany, long the region’s source of growth, heightened those concerns.

There are several big ideas about how to boost growth – for the long term. A free trade agreement with the United States, a Europe-wide investment fund to put 300 billion euros into infrastructure, looser employment rules in France and Italy. An ECB review of bank finances due this month could purge hidden losses from the financial system and get more credit flowing to companies.

Yet those ideas will take months or even years to boost economic activity. More immediate help would come from more monetary stimulus from the ECB or increased spending from governments.

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Those ideas, however, are running into friction from Berlin, which is pushing for governments to balance their budgets and is skeptical of the ECB’s stimulus plans.

ECB President Mario Draghi has put forward a three-part strategy to help the eurozone: more monetary stimulus from the ECB, more spending from governments that can afford it and pro-business reforms from more troubled governments.

Draghi went ahead with his part: the ECB announced in September it would buy bundles of bank loans, a way of stimulating the flow of credit to businesses. In June, it also offered cheap, long-term loans to banks on condition they lend the money on to companies. And Draghi has said the ECB is open to the more drastic step of buying large amounts of bonds to increase the amount of money in the financial system – so-called quantitative easing, or QE.

Yet governments have not followed Draghi’s advice to spend more where possible within EU rules. That’s because they have run into resistance from Germany, the eurozone’s dominant political and economic force, which wants governments to focus on reducing deficits.

Some countries, like France, have deficits above the EU limit of 3 percent of GDP. They argue that shrinking the deficit rapidly is now less important than boosting growth through government spending. Others, including Germany, have their public finances in order and could in theory increase spending. But Germany isn’t moving on this point.

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