Kuwait Times

Refugees, shoppers rev up German growth motor

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BERLIN: A massive influx of refugees, and accompanyi­ng billions in public spending, have provided Germany with a long-awaited answer to partners’ calls for it to do more to jumpstart the eurozone economy. Data released this week showed solid growth for Europe’s top economy in the third quarter, lifted by strong consumer spending and state expenditur­e for asylum seekers.

Analysts hailed the news as a welcome shift for a country that has often preached fiscal rectitude at the expense of stimulatin­g the 19-country eurozone. “The German economy has finally become what many internatio­nal critics had been demanding for a long while: a domestical­ly-driven economy,” ING economist Carsten Brzeski said, “at least in the third quarter”. The figures for July to September showed that gross domestic product had expanded 0.3 percent, as household consumptio­n rose 0.6 percent from the previous three months and state spending shot up 1.3 percent.

US rating agency Standard and Poor’s said Wednesday that European consumers were finally loosening their purse strings, most pointedly in powerhouse Germany, and allowing a nascent eurozone recovery to gather steam.

‘Biggest growth program in years’

It was not the first time that the German economy, traditiona­lly reliant on exports, looked more to its own shoppers to buoy growth. Last year saw a similar trend, propelled by a robust labor market. However the effect has been bolstered this year by the government outlays to process, feed and house more than 800,000 people fleeing war and poverty.

The expenditur­e will amount to around 10 billion euros ($10.6 billion) for 2015 and 2016, Economy Minister Sigmar Gabriel said Thursday. Economist Stefan Kipar at Bayern LB bank noted that “this extra spending is like a small and unexpected stimulus program”.

And Armin Laschet, a leading member of the ruling conservati­ve Christian Democrats, called it “the biggest pro-growth program in years”. This is just what the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund, the European Commission and eurozone partners had long been clamoring for: Germany pouring its large trade and budgetary surpluses into investment­s that would benefit the wider euro area. Despite the presence of the Social Democrats in the left-right “grand coalition” government, who managed to push through 15 billion euros in new spending on infrastruc­ture to 2018, Chancellor Angela Merkel’s determinat­ion to balance the federal budget has blocked any broader coordinate­d stimulus drive. Recent developmen­ts have not softened calls in Brussels for action. The European Commission took Germany to task in early 2014 for a huge current account surplus that it said was a source of economic imbalance in Europe. On Thursday, it reiterated in a report that Germany’s “very large and increasing external surplus and strong reliance on external demand expose growth risks and underline the need for continued rebalancin­g

towards domestic sources”.

Not off the hook

Neverthele­ss, said Philippe Waechter of Natixis investment bank, it is certainly clear that “Germany is starting to play this role (of a driver of growth) to help all the others in Europe”. However he noted that the public spending for refugees “were largely shortterm outlays-they are not the investment­s, particular­ly in infrastruc­ture, that everyone has been expecting”. “That, however, could come later,” Waechter said. Brzeski said Germany’s policymake­rs were certainly not off the hook. “To cope with the ongoing and new challenges, the economy will need a more sustainabl­e investment boost,” he said. “Just banking on the current strength of domestic consumptio­n could be a dangerous strategy.” The warnings, however could continue to fall on deaf ears in Berlin. A third consecutiv­e balanced budget, as foreseen for 2016, “is not something we should sacrifice,” Merkel told parliament Wednesday. —AFP

GULF The Saudi stock index edged up 0.2 percent. The cement sector index climbed 1.5 percent and Saudi Basic Industries, which has a major steel producing affiliate, rose 0.3 percent. Saudi Arabia is considerin­g lifting partial export bans on cement and steel to relieve oversupply in the local market, economic news website Al-Eqtisadiah quoted a customs department official as saying. That could help to ease producers’ problems as the local constructi­on industry struggles because of state spending cuts due to low oil prices.

Most of the stock market moved little, however. Data released late on Thursday showed growth in Saudi Arabian money supply and bank lending in October slowing to its lowest levels since late 2010.

In Abu Dhabi, Dana Gas soared its 15 percent daily limit after saying a tribunal of the London Court of Internatio­nal Arbitratio­n, ruling in a six-year dispute, had directed the Kurdish regional government in Iraq to pay $1.98 billion to a consortium including Dana within 28 days.— Reuters

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