Drop in German trade
activity feeds into global stimulus debate
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[August 08, 2017]
By Joseph Nasr
BERLIN (Reuters) - German trade activity
slowed abruptly in June, adding to signs that demand in leading
economies may be starting to flag just as central banks consider scaling
back years of stimulus.
Exports from Europe's biggest economy fell by 2.8 percent, the biggest
drop since August 2015 and one that ended five straight months of
growth. Imports sank by 4.5 percent, the biggest drop since January
2009, the Federal Statistics Office said.
Exports and imports in China, which along with Europe has been driving
an increasing share of global growth this year, grew much less than
expected in July, data from Beijing showed earlier on Tuesday.
Weaker import growth in the world's second-largest economy could be the
first tangible sign of a long-expected slowdown there. "We have to be
cautious about the import outlook," said Raymond Yeung, chief economist
for Greater China at ANZ in Hong Kong, while noting that bad weather may
have been a factor.
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The global growth equation has shifted with political ructions in
Washington and beyond that have stymied stimulus policies being pushed
by U.S. President Donald Trump.
Meanwhile further rate hikes remain on the Federal Reserve's horizon as
debates intensify among European Central Bank and Bank of Japan
policymakers about whether to rein in their stimulus programs.
The German data, which contrasted with expectations in a Reuters poll
for a 0.3 percent drop in exports and a 0.2 percent gain in imports,
drove the country's seasonally adjusted trade surplus to a 10-month
high.
That figure of 21.2 billion euros is likely to lead to pressure on the
government in Berlin to boost spending on investments as a way to
support the economic recovery in other countries - a call made by the
International Monetary Fund last month.
Germany's wider current account surplus, which measures the flow of
goods, services and investments, rose to 23.6 billion euros after a
downwardly revised reading of 16.0 billion euros in May, unadjusted data
showed.
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A containership is loaded at a terminal at the harbour in Hamburg,
late March 30, 2011. REUTERS/Fabian Bimmer
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ECONOMIC STABILITY
Chancellor Angela Merkel, expected to win a fourth term in a national election
next month, is campaigning on a platform of economic stability, and her
conservatives promised tax cuts worth some 15 billion euros annually as well as
increased spending on infrastructure, defense and security.
The government expects the economy to grow 1.5 percent this year, down from 1.9
percent in 2016, which was the strongest rate in five years.
Construction and state spending have already, along with consumption, provided
most of the growth impulse, supported by the low interest rate environment
created by the ECB.
"Even though this morning’s trade data add to a disappointing month for German
industry, we don’t think that the German economy has suddenly passed its peak,"
ING Bank economist Carsten Brzeski said.
"Instead, strong confidence indicators point to a continuation of the recovery.
Also, some kind of investment boost after the elections combined with the
gradual recovery of private investment already this year should extend an
already mature business cycle of the German economy well into 2018."
The Ifo institute said on Tuesday it expected the economy to grow 0.8 percent in
the second quarter.
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Industrial orders rose twice as much as expected in June, supported by strong
domestic demand, and while industrial output fell in June, they grew in the
second quarter overall.
(Additional reporting by Rene Wagner and by Elias Glenn and Stella Qiu in
Beijing; Editing by Madeline Chambers and John Stonestreet)
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