China Daily

German exporters benefit from Chinese market

-

BERLIN — Sentiment in Germany’s manufactur­ing sector “improved noticeably” as the ifo index for export expectatio­ns rose from 7.5 points in January to 10.7 points in February, the ifo Institute said.

The ifo export index, which reflects German companies’ export expectatio­ns for the next three months, climbed to the highest level since September 2018, according to the monthly ifo survey among 2,300 German manufactur­ers.

“China’s good economic situation and an increase in US production are helping German exporters,” said ifo Institute President Clemens Fuest in a statement.

Although the United States remained Germany’s biggest export market last year, exports declined by 12.5 percent year-on-year, reaching 103.8 billion euros ($126.2 billion), the Federal Statistica­l Office said on Monday.

China ranked second among Germany’s export markets, the office said. Unlike all other major markets, German exports to China were almost unaffected and only decreased by 0.1 percent year-onyear to 95.9 billion euros.

According to the German Electrical and Electronic Manufactur­ers’ Associatio­n, China even expanded its position as the German electrical industry’s biggest export market last year. With an increase of 6.5 percent to 23.3 billion euros, the Chinese market “developed more dynamicall­y” than before the COVID-19 pandemic.

The chemical industry in Germany and manufactur­ers of machinery and equipment also expected “significan­t export growth,” the ifo Institute said. Automotive manufactur­ers in Germany similarly “put a three-month lull behind them and are once again expecting more orders from abroad”.

However, Germany’s furniture and clothing industries will “still face difficulti­es” in the internatio­nal market and companies expected a “significan­t decline in sales,” the ifo Institute said.

The Associatio­n of the German Furniture Industry said last week that industry sales declined 3.7 percent year-on-year to 17.2 billion euros last year and the domestic market “proved to be significan­tly more stable for the industry than exports”.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Hong Kong