Gulf Today

Germany’s GDP grows more than expected in Q4 on strong exports

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BERLIN: Strong exports and solid constructi­on activity helped the German economy to grow by a beter-than-expected 0.3% in the final quarter of last year, but stricter lockdown measures at home and abroad are clouding the outlook for Europe’s largest economy.

The data, published by the Federal Statistics Office, marked an upward revision to its earlier estimate for a 0.1% expansion over the previous quarter.

The office also revised upward its 2020 fullyear GDP figure to -4.9% from -5.0%.

Adjusted for calendar effects, the German economy shrank by 5.3% last year, a much smaller contractio­n than in many other European countries, helped by a strong fiscal response to the damage caused by the COVID-19 pandemic.

A debt-financed fiscal splurge created an overall state budget deficit of 139.6 billion euros or 4.2% of gross domestic product in 2020, the office said. This was the first deficit since 2011 and the second-highest since German reunificat­ion.

Economy Minister Peter Altmaier said the growth data sent a positive signal, adding: “We will continue to do everything we can in the coming months to maintain the substance of our economy.”

Germany had registered record growth of 8.5% in the third quarter and an unpreceden­ted plunge of 9.7% in the second, due to the effects of its first coronaviru­s lockdown. The second lockdown, imposed at the beginning of November in hospitalit­y venues and expanded in mid-december to include most shops and services, caused a plunge in household spending in the fourth quarter, the office said.

Disposable income rose slightly, however, thanks to job protection schemes and state aid for parents. As the lockdown prevented many consumers from spending, the savings rate was an unusually high 15.7%. Household spending fell 3.3% in the quarter and constructi­on spending rose 1.8%. Exports grew 4.5%.

This meant net trade contribute­d 0.6 percentage points to the overall growth rate, whereas sluggish domestic activity subtracted 0.3 percentage points, the office said.

Thomas Gitzel from VP Bank said exportorie­nted manufactur­ers benefited from growing orders from China while low interest rates helped the constructi­on industry.

But the outlook remains clouded as German authoritie­s have extended the stricter lockdown until at least March 7, while restrictio­ns in other countries are weakening demand from abroad.

“Going forward, we stick to our forecast of a 1.5% q/q decline in the first quarter of 2021, mainly due to the negative effects on overall economic activity from the extended and tightened lockdown,” Unicredit said in a research note.

Carsten Brzeski from ING said that stricter lockdown measures since mid-december, weaker demand from other euro zone countries, harsh winter weather in February and a reversal of pre-brexit hoarding in the UK had increased the downside risk for the first quarter of 2021.

“The growth drivers of the fourth quarter could easily become drags in the first,” Brzeski cautioned.

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New cars for export at a port in Duisburg, Germany.
File/associated Press ↑ New cars for export at a port in Duisburg, Germany.

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