The Manila Times

Gloom settles over Germany’s economy

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FRANKFURT, Germany: Germany’s businesses remain mired in pessimism, a key survey showed Friday, as Europe’s largest economy struggles with shortages of skilled labor, slower global trade, high interest rates and political squabbling.

The closely watched Ifo institute survey of business sentiment rose only slightly to 85.5 points in February from 85.2 points in January due to “slightly less pessimisti­c expectatio­ns,” the institute said in an accompanyi­ng statement.

“The German economy is stabilizin­g at a low level,” the institute said.

The survey results follow a sharp downgrade of the government’s expectatio­ns for growth this year, to only 0.2 percent, from 1.3 percent in the previous forecast. Germany’s economy shrank 0.3 percent in 2023, the worst performanc­e by a major economy and a reversal of years of economic success as an export champion.

The survey results follow a sharp downgrade of the government’s expectatio­ns for growth this year, to only 0.2 percent, from 1.3 percent in the previous forecast. Germany’s economy shrank 0.3 percent in 2023, the worst performanc­e by a major economy and a reversal of years of economic success as an export champion.

Giant chemical company BASF on Friday joined a string of major employers saying they would cut positions, citing a “low-demand environmen­t.” The company said it made money last year “in all significan­t countries except Germany,” and losses at its home base in Ludwigshaf­en meant it would seek to cut costs there by 1.1 billion euros ($1.2 billion) a year by the end of 2026.

The efficiency program “will therefore also unfortunat­ely lead to further job cuts,” Chief Executive Officer Martin Brudermuel­ler said in a statement with specifying how many positions would go.

Other employers recently announcing job reductions include appliance maker Miele, which plans to move 700 jobs to Poland, and Deutsche Bank, which said it will drop 3,500 positions.

Germany faces a combinatio­n of temporary and long-term headwinds. A burst of inflation after Russia cut off natural gas supplies over the war in Ukraine robbed consumers of spending power. While inflation has since eased and wages are starting to catch up, slowing global trade has held back an economy that is heavily dependent on exports.

High interest rates from the European Central Bank — aimed at squelching inflation — have held back credit-sensitive business areas like the constructi­on of new apartments and offices.

Meanwhile, companies say they can’t find enough skilled labor and have to spend time and money on extensive approval processes and bureaucrac­y. Over the longer term, the government skimped on investing in infrastruc­ture such as rail networks and high-speed internet in order to balance budgets.

A 2009 constituti­onal amendment limiting deficit spending has come back to haunt the current government, which had to revise its spending for this year at the last minute after the constituti­onal court rejected the practice of putting additional spending in special emergency funds.

A relatively modest package of tax breaks for business proposed by Chancellor Olaf Scholz’s coalition government is stalled in the upper house of the legislatur­e. It is being blocked by the conservati­ve opposition party, which demands restoratio­n of a subsidy on diesel fuel for farmers. The cancellati­on of the subsidy has led to farmers blocking roads with their tractors.

The economy shrank 0.3 percent in the last three months of 2023, official figures confirmed Friday, and economists are forecastin­g another shrinkage in the current quarter.

Friday’s Ifo release “gives very little hope of an imminent rebound,” said Carsten Brzeski, global head of macro at ING bank.

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