Showing posts with label ​​​​​Germany. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ​​​​​Germany. Show all posts

Monday, 3 February 2025

Germany: The Sick Man of Europe

Recent data reveals that growth eluded the German economy for the second consecutive year in 2024. However, these woes run deeper, as the economy has roughly stagnated since 2020. With the country gearing up for federal elections this February, all eyes are on potential policy changes—spoiler alert, they’re likely to be limited. Below is a look at the key challenges facing the German economy and our panelists’ outlook going forward.

Two fundamental pillars of the German economy have been rocked over the past years: Cheap energy prices and easy access to large export markets. In 2019, the country’s electricity prices were among the lowest in the EU, but in 2023 German electricity prices had more than doubled due to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

This reversal of fortunes shook the key industrial sector, which is expect to shrink further for the fourth straight year in 2025. Meanwhile, China’s rising share in markets formerly dominated by German firms—such as automobiles—and a likely increase in trade barriers to both the Chinese and US markets threaten external demand. Together, China and the US absorb around 16% of German exports.

Deteriorating infrastructure, lagging digitalization efforts, the government’s collapse… the list of the economy’s domestic woes goes on, but the culprit, it turns out, is the same: The federal debt brake. This measure caps the state’s net borrowing at 0.35% of GDP annually to contain the public-debt-to-GDP ratio.

Though, successful in its primary aim—Germany has the lowest such ratio among G7 countries—it has had the unfortunate side effect of limiting public investment at a time when it’s desperately needed.

Add to that excessive red tape constraining private investment, and the result is crumbling international competitiveness; according to a report by the Institute for Management Development, Germany has dropped nine places to 24th in the global competitiveness rankings in the past two years. Reforms to the debt brake require a two-thirds majority in Parliament, and are opposed by the two front-runners for the February elections. As a result, such reforms are likely a pipedream.

Though Covid-19 was successfully contained in 2021, households were plagued for a prolonged period afterwards by weak consumer sentiment, declining real wages and elevated interest rates. Heading into 2025, real income growth should pick up, which together with further rate cuts by the ECB will support consumer spending. Still, spending growth will be below the Euro average amid rising unemployment and persistent consumer negativity—in part due to lingering political uncertainty.

The Consensus is currently for the economy to post a shallow rebound in 2025 as lower interest rates and inflation drive improvements in private spending and fixed investment, and stronger EU demand fuels a recovery in exports. Still, Germany will again claim the title of the G7’s worst performer this year, held down by protracted malaise in the key industrial sector.

According to ING’s Carsten Brzeski, “The country is still one of the richest economies in the world, but it needs an overhaul to stop its gradual deterioration. Just addressing the main issues will be a challenge. Add to this unfavourable demographics and the impact on healthcare and pension systems and it’s clear that there is no easy way out of the current situation. In the absence of any new policy initiatives after the elections, the German economy looks set for another year of stagnation and possibly even a third consecutive contraction. A sad new record.”

Friedrich Schaper and Sven Jari Stehn, analysts at Goldman Sachs, said, “The early elections therefore provide an opportunity to tackle Germany’s many economic challenges. While some additional fiscal support seems likely, we believe any fiscal expansion is going to be limited in size, focus mostly on investment and support growth meaningfully only from 2026. Decisive structural reforms could boost Germany’s growth prospects—as they did in the early 2000s—but likewise take time to implement, leaving a weak growth outlook for 2025.”

Courtesy: Focuseconomics