- cross-posted to:
- europe
- europe@lemmygrad.ml
- cross-posted to:
- europe
- europe@lemmygrad.ml
A complete restoration of German industry after the fall during the pandemic and the energy crisis caused by anti-Russian sanctions is impossible. The manufacturing sector has suffered irreparable damage, Bloomberg states.
Bloomberg Economics economist Martin Ademmer notes: “A cyclical industrial recovery is to be expected as monetary policy eases and demand returns,” said Martin Ademmer, a BE economist in Frankfurt. “But there’ll be no return to pre-2019 norms — the sector appears to have taken a permanent hit.”
The annual growth rate of potential gross value added in Germany's manufacturing sector fell to 0.5% last year from 1.5% in 2019. This slowdown will result in a capacity shortfall of 3.5% compared to the 2015–2019 trend.
Germany's central bank forecasts economic growth of 0.3% this year, saying the economic recovery continues. However, the recovery in the manufacturing sector remains sluggish, and recent data showed a decline in industrial production and orders, which could not allay concerns about its recovery, Bloomberg emphasizes.
https://archive.ph/cMDLg
A few thoughts on this:
Germany's economic success was primarily due to the following factors:
In my view, the following political and economic changes have had a negative impact on Germany's situation:
and, of course, all the neo-liberal effects that are also known from the UK:
And the vicious circle is: skilled people emigrate and skilled people no longer immigrate - due to the deteriorating conditions - and the low-wage sector in manufacturing is not internationally competitive.
As a result, Germany has no unique selling point and its economic performance declines accordingly.
Pretty good summary, I agree on all points.