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Galloping energy prices affect companies - Stahlverband: "The backbone of German industry is dying"

2021-10-20T13:10:53.389Z


The rapidly rising energy prices are now also putting companies in a mood of alarm. If the situation does not improve, many energy-intensive companies would have to leave Germany.


The rapidly rising energy prices are now also putting companies in a mood of alarm.

If the situation does not improve, many energy-intensive companies would have to leave Germany.

Wiesbaden - The rapid rise in energy prices is having an impact on German industry.

In September, according to new figures from the Federal Statistical Office, manufacturers increased their prices more sharply than they have been in almost 50 years.

In a year-on-year comparison, producer prices rose by 14.2 percent, the fastest they have been since October 1974.

The main cause of the development is the jump in energy prices.

The German Institute for Economic Research (DIW) assumes that the current sharp rise in inflation will not last, but that worries about price increases could further fuel inflation.

Energy prices: gas with a big jump in price

According to the Federal Statistical Office, gas rose particularly sharply in September, with the average price skyrocketing by almost 59 percent.

Apart from that, the prices of many materials and intermediate products that the industry processes are also rising.

Metals were on average 35.5 percent more expensive than a year earlier.

The steel and metal processing trade association has already warned of the threat of a large-scale company death.

Energy prices: Economists warn of wage-price spiral

Many economists still assume a temporary phenomenon, but the DIW economists believe that a self-reinforcing effect is possible if fear of inflation spreads. The authors of the study, Kerstin Bernoth and Gökhan Ider, argue that the sharp rise in prices is mainly due to one-off measures and events, including the withdrawal of the VAT cuts.

“Expectations are more of a threat,” warned Bernoth.

If consumers and businesses assume that prices will continue to rise, “people will buy things first and demand higher wages.

The companies, in turn, will add to their prices if they expect to have to pay higher wages and higher producer prices. ”According to the economist, this could set off a wage-price spiral.

"Higher inflation expectations could then become a self-fulfilling prophecy and drive real inflation."

Inflation at its highest level in 28 years

In Germany, the inflation rate in September * at 4.1 percent had passed the four percent mark for the first time in almost 28 years.

In the entire euro area, the inflation rate reached 3.4 percent in September, its highest level in 13 years.

The statistics agency Eurostat confirmed its previous survey on Wednesday.

The last time inflation was higher was in September 2008.

The so-called core inflation rate excluding energy and food also rose, rising from 1.6 percent in August to 1.9 percent.

The European Central Bank also regards the rise in inflation as temporary and points to numerous special effects, most of which can be traced back to the pandemic.

However, last year many economists still expected that there would be no noticeable rise in inflation.

The outgoing Bundesbank President Jens Weidmann appealed in the context of his resignation to his colleagues in the ECB, “not to look one-sidedly at deflation risks, but also not to lose sight of prospective inflation risks”.

Association paints a gloomy scenario

The steel and metal processing trade association painted a gloomy scenario on the wall.

"The rapid rise in prices for industrial electricity and natural gas means for many medium-sized industrial companies in steel and metal processing that they can no longer produce in Germany," said a statement by the association, which, according to its own account, represents a good 5,000 companies, mostly family businesses .

"The backbone of German industry is dying."

The association appealed to the large corporations to "recognize" the situation of their medium-sized suppliers.

The association called on the federal government to temporarily forego state levies such as the EEG surcharge, which make energy prices more expensive.

* Merkur.de is part of IPPEN.MEDIA.

Source: merkur

All news articles on 2021-10-20

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