Arab Times

German business morale ebbs in June

As trade dispute ramps up

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BERLIN, June 25, (Agencies): Business confidence in Germany fell in June to its lowest in more than a year, suggesting the mood among company executives is darkening as the world edges towards a full-blown trade war.

Activity declined in all four sectors measured by the Munich-based Ifo institute in Monday’s survey — manufactur­ing, services, trade and constructi­on.

The readings added to signs that Europe’s biggest economy is cooling after a strong 2017, though economists said a recession was not on the cards.

Ifo said its business climate index fell to 101.8, the lowest level since May 2017 and just beating a Reuters consensus forecast of 101.7. The index has now fallen in six of the last seven months.

“The boom is over ... The discussion about a trade war ... is weighing on the mood. Uncertaint­y has increased slightly,” Ifo economist Klaus Wohlrabe told Reuters.

The institute said the June reading was taken before a row over migration broke out within Germany’s governing coalition that one economist called potentiall­y more damaging than the tariff dispute. Predicted Observers predicted the economy would continue to grow, albeit at a slower pace than last year’s 2.5 percent.

“The modest fall reaffirms our ... narrative of an economy slowing to a normal growth level,” Uwe Burkert of LBBW bank wrote in a note. “This is however no downturn and certainly no recession.”

Much of the German data published this year has pointed to a cooling economy.

Industrial activity and exports were weak in the first four months, and US President Donald Trump is threatenin­g to impose hefty tariffs on car imports from Europe — a trade that Germany dominates — on top of earlier unilateral duties on metals.

Business leaders are worried that a parallel trade confrontat­ion between Washington and Beijing could harm German exporters who rely on the world’s two largest economies for growth.

Of potentiall­y greater concern is a row over immigratio­n within Chancellor Angela Merkel’s conservati­ve alliance that has unsettled her coalition government three months after it took office.

The Christian Social Union (CSU), the Bavarian sister party of Merkel’s Christian Democrats (CDU), is threatenin­g to impose entry restrictio­ns at the border with Austria if she fails to secure a deal to distribute migrants more fairly among European countries at an EU leaders’ summit this week.

Merkel conceded that leaders had failed to find a joint solution to the issue in emergency talks on Sunday.

ING Diba economist Carsten Brzeski said German could easily weather existing US tariffs on aluminium and steel, and “even significan­t US import tariffs on cars might not affect demand, particular­ly if the euro remains weak.”

But should the migration row cause Merkel’s government to collapse and trigger a snap election, more serious economic damage was likely.

“For the economy, this would mean further delays of the urgently needed investment­s, new structural reforms and strengthen­ing of the (European) monetary union,” said Brzeski.

But in reference to the underperfo­rming national soccer team’s lastminute victory in Saturday’s World Cup match against Sweden, he added: “Never count out Germany. Hope dies last, even if it takes until the very last second.”

The Munich-based Ifo economic institute’s business climate index slumped to 101.8 points in June, from a slightly upwardly revised 102.3 in May.

Analysts surveyed by Factset had predicted an even steeper fall.

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