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News > Germany

Germany to Slide Into Recession in 2023

  • Germany's Economic Affairs Minister Robert Habeck, 2022.

    Germany's Economic Affairs Minister Robert Habeck, 2022. | Photo: Twitter/ @PetrHolec

Published 13 October 2022
Opinion

"This severe energy crisis threatens to become an economic and, in conjunction with it, a social crisis," Habeck warned.

On Wednesday, Economic Affairs Minister Robert Habeck acknowledged that the gross domestic product (GDP) will suffer a contraction of 0.4 percent in 2023, putting Germany on track for a deeper recession next year.

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"This severe energy crisis threatens to become an economic and, in conjunction with it, a social crisis," he said, adding that the measures taken by the government to address the energy crisis have worked "no matter how serious and depressing these figures are."

A "significantly sharper" economic decline has been forecast for a worst-case scenario that includes a freeze of Russian gas supplies. At the beginning of September, gas supplies through the important Nord Stream 1 pipeline to Germany were completely halted after being suspended several times previously for maintenance work.

To ensure heating supply this winter, the authorities have accelerated the filling of the country's gas storages. According to the government's targets, gas storage facilities should be at least 95 percent full by Nov. 1. This target, Habeck said, has now almost been reached.

Driven by soaring energy prices, inflation in Germany has risen steadily since the start of the Russia-Ukraine conflict, reaching record levels of 10 percent in September, according to preliminary figures issued by the Federal Statistical Office (Destatis).

To cushion the impact of high inflation, the government has already presented relief measures, which include short-term financial support to residents faced with steep heating bills and increased welfare payments. It also announced a "protective umbrella" of up to US$194 billion to stabilize the economy.

As a result of the measures, inflation would drop to 7 percent next year instead of rising further as predicted by the economic institutes earlier, Habeck said. "These packages will have an impact, also to curb inflation."

However, companies have warned that "weak investment" is reducing the country's growth potential. This increases the risk that the German economy would "lose ground in global competition," the Federation of German Industries said on Wednesday.

"Of course, we need the full financial power of the state to maintain the substance of our economy and jobs," Habeck said, promising to "quickly implement" the gas and electricity price brakes.

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