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German economy: Industry supply bottlenecks are slowing the upswing

2021-10-29T08:27:05.580Z


Private consumption in particular contributed to the growth in the third quarter. But the rampant supply bottlenecks in the industry are slowing the upswing.


Private consumption in particular contributed to the growth in the third quarter.

But the rampant supply bottlenecks in the industry are slowing the upswing.

Wiesbaden - Despite massive delivery bottlenecks, the German economy remained on a growth path in the third quarter.

The gross domestic product (GDP) rose by 1.8 percent compared to the previous quarter, as the Federal Statistical Office announced in a first estimate on Friday in Wiesbaden.

According to the latest figures, Europe's largest economy even grew by 1.9 percent in the second quarter.

However, the gross domestic product is still in the red in a pre-crisis comparison.

Compared to the fourth quarter of 2019, the period before the start of the Corona crisis, GDP in the third quarter of 2021 was 1.1 percent lower.


According to the information, economic growth in the period from July to the end of September was mainly driven by consumer spending.

The restrictions to combat the corona pandemic with the temporary closure of restaurants, fitness studios and shops had been gradually relaxed from mid-May.


The industry, on the other hand, suffers from a shortage of materials and delivery bottlenecks, which are a consequence of the 2020 Corona crisis.

Last year the demand collapsed.

With the economic recovery, global demand is picking up again.

Raw materials and intermediate products such as semiconductors are scarce and have become significantly more expensive.

Despite well-filled order books, some companies have to cut production.


The federal government and economists therefore expect the economic recovery to slow significantly towards the end of the year.

This year, in view of the current delivery bottlenecks and high energy prices around the world, the hoped-for “final spurt” will not come, said the managing minister of economics Peter Altmaier (CDU) recently.

He spoke of a historically unique shortage of intermediate goods.


The federal government lowered the growth expectations for 2021.

After the corona-related collapse in gross domestic product in 2020, the government expects economic output to increase by 2.6 percent this year - in April an increase of 3.5 percent was predicted.

Economic growth of 4.1 percent is now expected for 2022 instead of the previous 3.6 percent.


Leading economic research institutes had also lowered their economic forecast for this year significantly.

They expect economic growth in Europe's largest economy of 2.4 percent.

(dpa / utz)

Source: merkur

All news articles on 2021-10-29

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