Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

Months-long slide in German business morale deepens

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FRANKFURT AM MAIN (AFP) - Confidence among business leaders in Germany fell for the sixth month in a row in February, a closely-watched survey showed yesterday, as global trade struggles cast a pall over Europe’s powerhouse economy.

The Munich-based Ifo institute’s business confidence index slid 0.8 points this month to reach 98.5, its lowest level in four years.

“The German economy is experienci­ng a downturn,” Ifo president Clemens Fuest said in a statement.

A sub-index measuring companies’ view of the present business situation dipped 1.1 points, to 103.4, while another gauging expectatio­ns for the coming months lost 0.5 points, to 93.8.

Looking to different areas of the economy, manufactur­ing firms had “far more pessimisti­c” expectatio­ns compared with January. Services, trade and constructi­on indexes also fell -- with the building sector losing ground “for the first time in years,” Fuest noted.

Yesterday’s Ifo release comes one day after an account of the European Central Bank’s January meeting highlighte­d fierce headwinds in internatio­nal trade weighing on the 19-nation eurozone.

With its export-oriented manufactur­ers and massive trade surplus, Germany is one of the countries most exposed to the uncertaint­y caused by rising protection­ism and trade conflicts.

“The threat from the USA of punitive tariffs on our most important export good cars is hovering closer than ever,” noted Joerg Zeuner, chief economist at public investment bank KFW.

US President Donald Trump on Monday received a Department of Commerce report that sources said classed European car imports as a national security threat potentiall­y justifying swingeing new tariffs.

Meanwhile “our important partner Great Britain continues to race towards the Brexit cliff and the global economy is no longer running smoothly,” Zeuner added.

Such fears have prompted downgrades to the growth outlook by private- and public-sector observers, with Germany’s economy ministry now forecastin­g just 1.0 percent expansion in 2019, compared with a 1.8 percent prediction last autumn.

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