Germany
looks set to enter a RECESSION after Europe's financial giant sees
unexpected collapse in industrial production
- German industry shocked experts as it plummeted by -1.9 percent in November
- This week economists say Europe's largest economy could enter a recession
- Year-over-year production descended to -4.6 percent, the worst since 2008
- Uncertainty in Germany could devastate the Italian and Greek markets
10
January, 2019
Germany
is on the brink of a recession as Europe's financial powerhouse
suffered a collapse in industrial production.
The
German economy stunned traders this week when it plummeted more
sharply than expected.
Industrial
production fell by -1.9 percent in November - a year-on-year low of
-4.6 percent - which has fuelled uncertainty in the world's fourth
largest economy.
A
recession in Germany could have a devastating impact on the fragile
Greek and Italian economies.
'Yesterday's
manufacturing data in Germany provided alarming evidence of a much
more severe slowdown in the second half of last year than economists
had initially expected.' Claus Vistesen of Pantheon Macreconomics
told Business Insider.
He
said the economy had been rocked by a 'perfect storm across all
sectors.'
The
collapse was so swift that Vitesen initially told his clients he did
not believe the data was accurate.
Stefan
Schilbe of HSBC told Business Insider that a recession was now
likely, as Germany faces its lowest industrial production since 2008.
In
recent days, evidence has been piling up that the eurozone recovery
lost more momentum than anticipated at the end of 2018, particularly
in Germany.
Unemployment
across the eurozone had been falling steadily from a peak of 12.1
percent in 2013 as the region recovered from the global financial
crisis.
However,
ongoing worries about the level of government debt in a number of
countries kept unemployment high, such as in Greece and Spain.
Since
the German economy contracted by a quarterly rate of 0.2 percent in
the third quarter of 2018 largely as a result of one-time factors
related to new car emissions standards, another drop in the
fourth-quarter drop would mean Germany will have entered a recession,
defined as two straight quarters of negative output.
Still,
unemployment remains extremely low in Germany at 3.3 percent, in
sharp contrast to the rates still seen in those economies that were
at the forefront of the eurozone's debt crisis.
Germany
is on the brink of a recession as Europe's financial powerhouse
suffered a collapse in industrial production.
The
German economy stunned traders this week when it plummeted more
sharply than expected.
Industrial
production fell by -1.9 percent in November - a year-on-year low of
-4.6 percent - which has fuelled uncertainty in the world's fourth
largest economy.
The
Euro symbol stands outside the European Central Bank, a recession in
Germany could spell disaster throughout the Eurozone, particularly in
countries like Italy and Greece which are already fragile
The
German share price index DAX graph is pictured at the stock exchange
in Frankfurt on Wednesday as traders reacted to the bleak outlook
Greece's
unemployment rate, though sharply down from its peak, was still 18.6
percent in September.
There
are other clouds beyond Germany hanging over the eurozone economy at
the start of the new year.
France,
the eurozone's second largest economy, is also facing difficulties.
The
country's statistics agency INSEE revealed Wednesday that consumer
confidence plunged in December to a four-year low largely as a result
of the yellow vest protests that brought much of France, but
particularly Paris, to its knees in the crucial Christmas trading
period.
In
addition, trade tensions between the U.S. and China have the
potential to further weigh on a softer global economy while Britain's
impending exit from the EU could be another negative hit particularly
if the country crashes out of the bloc without a deal to smooth its
transition to new trading arrangements
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