Arab Times

Trump, Brexit hit German ‘growth’

Xenophobia also a threat

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BERLIN, Sept 25, (RTRS): Germany’s BDI industry associatio­n on Tuesday lowered its 2018 growth forecast and warned of a potential downturn, citing weaker demand for German exports due to US trade policy and Brexit, as well a threat to the economy from xenophobia at home.

The German economy is now expected to grow by 2.0 percent this year, down from a previous estimate of 2.25 percent, BDI President Dieter Kempf said. Exports will rise by 3.5 percent in real terms, below an initial forecast of 5 percent.

The prediction­s of slower growth were reinforced by Germany’s economic institutes. Two government sources familiar with a report to be released later this week said the institutes would cut their 2018 forecast to 1.7 percent from 2.2 percent.

In an unusually strong interventi­on into domestic politics, the BDI’s Kempf warned that the German economy could be hurt by a wave of nationalis­m, after violent protests in the eastern city of Chemnitz that followed a stabbing blamed on migrants.

“An allegedly homeland-loving nationalis­m that declares everything foreign an enemy is wrong,” he said. “It poses a threat to the business model of our industry which is based on openness – and it’s jeopardisi­ng prosperity and employment.

While Europe’s biggest economy has been growing for nine years and could continue expanding, Kempf said it was urgent that Germans now take steps to prepare for the possibilit­y of a downturn: “We have to take precaution­s – now.”

The BDI called for lower corporate taxes, higher public investment in education and digital infrastruc­ture as well as a completion of the European Union’s single market by harmonisin­g rules in areas such as services, energy and digital business.

“The trade policy of US President Trump, but also the approachin­g Brexit are dampening investment activity worldwide and with it German export business,” Kempf said.

At its event in Berlin, the BDI hosted Chancellor Angela Merkel and World Trade Organizati­on (WTO) Director-General Roberto Azevedo, both of whom spoke out strongly in defence of a trade system that Germany sees as threatened by US policy.

Merkel told business leaders that the WTO was facing “huge challenges”, and criticised a US decisison to block the appointmen­t of WTO judges: “If there are no new judges appointed, of course, that’s also an underminin­g (of the WTO).”

Azevedo said he was counting on Germany and the European Union to support efforts to safeguard the rulesbased free trade order. “Of course, the system can be better, in fact it must be better,” Azevedo said, pointing to reform proposals to address trade-distorting practices.

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