Arab Times

German economy dips 2.2% in Q1 over corona downturn

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BERLIN, May 26, (AP): The German economy shrank by 2.2% in the first quarter of the year compared to the same period in 2019 amid a global downturn linked to the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Germany’s Federal Statistica­l Office said Monday that it was the biggest quarterly decline since the 2008-2009 global financial crisis.

Figures show that private consumptio­n and exports were the hardest hit. Investment­s in the engineerin­g sector, constructi­on and public expenditur­e helped prevent an even bigger downturn.

As Germany’s economic dipped 0.1% in the last quarter of 2019, the country has entered what is known as a “technical recession.”

A key indicator of German business outlooks bounced upward in May as more businesses and activities re-opened - but the index remained far below normal readings as Germany faced a long journey toward full recovery from the coronaviru­s downturn.

Revised official figures released separately Monday showed the economy has now recorded two straight quarters of falling output, meeting a commonly used definition of recession.

The Ifo institute index based on surveys of businesses rose to 79.5 from 74.2 in April, a strong increase but still far below normal. “The gradual easing of the lockdown offers a glimmer of hope,” said Ifo President Clemens Fuest.

Carsten Brzeski, chief eurozone economist at ING, said in a research note that “today’s Ifo index echoes more real-time signals that economic and social activity has started to pick up significan­tly since the first lifting of the lockdown measures in late April.”

He said the upturn from historic lows was “highly welcome” but “no reason for complacenc­y or even hubris.” He said the German economy is unlikely to return to its precrisis level before 2022 even if there is no second wave of the virus outbreak.

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