German economy delivers balanced growth, cushioning against trade risks

FAN Editor
FILE PHOTO: A worker grinds metal at the machine-building company Zemmler Siebanlagen in Massen
FILE PHOTO: A worker grinds metal at the machine-building company Zemmler Siebanlagen in Massen, Germany, March 22, 2018. REUTERS/Hannibal Hanschke/File Photo

August 24, 2018

By Joseph Nasr

BERLIN (Reuters) – All sectors of the German economy grew in the second quarter, data showed, with robust domestic activity helping to cushion against risks to exports from an uncertain global trade outlook.

Investments in construction and state spending expanded the most, both up 0.6 percent quarter on quarter, and private consumption extended its growth run to six straight quarters.

Friday’s Federal Statistics Office figures, which matched a preliminary overall growth reading of 0.5 percent, confirmed Europe’s largest economy’s increasing reliance on domestic drivers.

Berlin has been criticized by its euro zone partners for not helping their economies by spending more of its budget surplus on investments.

Carsten Brzeski of ING Diba said Friday’s data should help counter that view.

“Defying the often-heard international criticism, the economy is already showing a very balanced growth model,” he wrote in a note to clients. It had delivered “a full strike”, with all sectors growing.

Imports rose 1.7 percent while exports gained 0.7 percent, resulting in net trade deducting 0.4 percentage points from growth.

BLUE SKIES FOR NOW

Germany’s economy has traditionally been dominated by exports. That sector’s prominence has declined in recent quarters, and trade disputes between the United States and many of its largest commercial partners, including the European Union, risk diminishing its influence further.

Stefan Kipar of BayernLB said he saw no signs of that yet, however.

“It’s encouraging to see that investments did not decline. And we don’t see an export weakness,” he wrote in a note to clients.

U.S. President Donald Trump, who has imposed tariffs on steel and aluminum imports from the EU, agreed last month to defer imposing levies on cars imported from the bloc while the two sides negotiate over other trade issues.

A larger scale trade row between the United States and China could also harm Germany, many of whose manufacturers rely on growth in the world’s two largest economies.

Further clouding the outlook for Germany are U.S. sanctions on smaller trade partners Turkey and Russia, and the risk of Britain leaving the EU next year without a negotiated deal.

“Many potential risks (lie) ahead but at least for now, there is only one good reaction to today’s growth data: enjoy and savor,” ING Diba’s Brzeski said.

(Editing by Maria Sheahan and John Stonestreet)

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