Arab Times

German economy defies trade gloom

Growth accelerate­s in second quarter

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BERLIN, Aug 14, (AP) : The German economy accelerate­d in the second quarter despite the US move to impose new tariffs on the European Union, official data showed Tuesday, performing slightly better than economists had expected.

Germany’s economy, Europe’s biggest, grew by 0.5 percent compared with the previous threemonth period. That is up from 0.4 percent in the first quarter - a figure that was revised upward Tuesday from the initial reading of 0.3 percent given in May. Economists had forecast a 0.4 percent increase this time.

Its performanc­e in the April-June period was helped by higher private and government spending and by increased investment in equipment and constructi­on, the Federal Statistica­l Office said. Rising exports were outpaced by increasing imports. In year-on-year terms, the economy expanded by 2.3 percent in the second quarter.

In a separate report Tuesday, the European Union’s statistics agency revised upward its estimate of second-quarter growth for the whole of the 19-nation eurozone, to 0.4 percent from the 0.3 percent it had initially estimated. That follows growth of 0.4 percent in the first quarter.

Confidence

The figure from Germany underlined the country’s continuing robust performanc­e, with business confidence high and unemployme­nt low despite some disappoint­ing data on factory orders this year and concern about global trade tensions.

It has now grown for 34 of the past 37 quarters, said Carsten Brzeski, an economist at ING in Frankfurt, but he cautioned that “the challenges facing the German economy will increase rather than decrease.”

UniCredit economist Andreas Rees said that a further extension of US tariffs on Chinese imports and retaliatio­n by China could weigh on global growth, but “the latest events in Turkey are manageable for the German economy.”

Last month’s deal to defuse the US-EU trade dispute that saw the Trump administra­tion impose tariffs on steel and aluminum and the EU retaliate on various US goods has reduced fears of a direct transAtlan­tic clash, for now.

US President Donald Trump and Commission President JeanClaude Juncker agreed to start talks intended to achieve “zero tariffs” and “zero subsidies” on non-automotive industrial goods. German exporters remain wary. “We should not think ourselves safe, because today’s good figures are not necessaril­y those of tomorrow, particular­ly in view of the current internatio­nal environmen­t,” said Holger Bingmann, the head of the BGA exporters’ associatio­n. “This developmen­t could break off abruptly if disputes and trade conflicts escalate.”

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