Oman Daily Observer

German consumer morale falls more than expected heading into March

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BERLIN: The mood among German consumers worsened more than expected heading into March to reach its lowest level in four months, a survey showed on Thursday, citing rising inflation and economic risks linked to the policies of US President Donald Trump.

The consumer sentiment indicator, published by the Nuremberg-based GfK institute and based on a survey of around 2,000 Germans, fell to 10.0 going into March. A Reuters poll had expected a fall to 10.1 from 10.2 a month earlier.

GfK’s index contrasts with Wednesday’s Ifo index that showed German business morale rose in February, and with bullish overnight comments from the German finance ministry.

Compiler GfK said all three component of its index — overall economic expectatio­n, personal income expectatio­n and propensity to buy — fell after three increases in a row.

“The policies of the new US president are causing uncertaint­y and economic worry among German consumers,” said GfK researcher Rolf Buerkl.

“Donald Trump’s plans to bolster protection­ism are giving rise to job insecurity primarily among workers in industries that rely heavily on exports, such as the automotive and machine engineerin­g, as well as the chemical industry,” he added.

GfK said the subindex measuring consumers’ expectatio­ns for the economy fell, but it still remained on a fairly high level, lying six points above the previous year’s reading.

The decline in personal income expectatio­ns was put down to rising consumer prices after German inflation picked up to 1.9 per cent in January.

“More steeply increasing prices — especially for energy — are diminishin­g consumer purchasing power,” said Buerkl.

The German economy grew by 1.9 per cent in 2016, the strongest rate in five years, driven by private consumptio­n, state spending and constructi­on.

For this year, the German government forecasts a weaker growth rate of 1.4 per cent because there will be fewer workdays and exports are likely to rise less strongly than imports.

Germany’s solid labour market, coupled with increased state spending and low interest rates, has boosted consumptio­n.

This trend is expected to continue this year, however at a slightly slower pace.

 ?? — AFP ?? The consumer sentiment indicator, published by GfK institute, fell to 10.0 going into March. A Reuters poll had expected a fall to 10.1 from 10.2 a month earlier.
— AFP The consumer sentiment indicator, published by GfK institute, fell to 10.0 going into March. A Reuters poll had expected a fall to 10.1 from 10.2 a month earlier.
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