Supply bottlenecks throttle German industrial output in April
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[June 08, 2021] By
Michael Nienaber
BERLIN (Reuters) -A lack of semiconductors, timber and other
intermediate goods drove an unexpected fall in German industrial output
in April, a further sign that massive supply bottlenecks are hampering
the recovery in Europe's largest economy.
The Federal Statistics Office said industrial output dropped 1.0% on the
month after a downwardly revised increase of 2.2% in March. A Reuters
poll had pointed to a 0.5% rise in April.
The drop in the headline figure was driven by a decrease in consumer
goods production of more than 3% and a plunge in construction activity
of more than 4%.
The weaker than expected industrial figures suggest that the German
economy will have to rely on household spending to support a
still-fragile recovery from the coronavirus crisis.
"Such a combination is unparalleled: Order books in industry are well
filled and production is falling," VP Bank economist Thomas Gitzel said,
adding that the supply problems with semiconductors were pushing down
output in the car industry.
So despite well-filled order books, manufacturing will only make a
limited contribution to overall economic growth in the second quarter,
Gitzel said.
The economy ministry said industrial output was being hampered by supply
bottlenecks for intermediate products such as semiconductors and timber.
But it added that business sentiment surveys were suggesting an
improvement in coming months.
Germany's Ifo business sentiment brightened in May to hit a two-year
high as COVID-19 curbs were eased and infections fell, suggesting a
swift summer recovery after the economy shrank more than expected in the
first quarter.
Investor sentiment in Germany fell in June but remained at a high level
and expectations for a strong economic recovery for the next six months
are intact, a survey by the ZEW economic research institute showed on
Tuesday.
The ZEW's survey of investors' economic sentiment fell to 79.8 points
from 84.4 in the previous month. But a separate ZEW gauge of current
conditions surged to -9.1 points from -40.1.
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A worker wears a protective mask at the Volkswagen assembly line
after VW re-starts Europe's largest car factory after coronavirus
shutdown in Wolfsburg, Germany, April 27, 2020, as the spread of the
coronavirus disease (COVID-19) continues. Swen Pfoertner/Pool via
REUTERS/File Photo
"The economic recovery is progressing," ZEW President Achim Wambach said in a
statement. "The decline in expectations is probably largely due to the
considerably better assessment of the economic situation, which is now back at
pre-crisis levels."
"The financial market experts therefore continue to expect a strong economic
recovery for the next six months," he added.
Andrew Kenningham of Capital Economics said the chip shortages were likely to
continue to constrain the recovery but that it should be a temporary problem.
Industrial output should recover somewhat in May and June which should enable
overall economic growth of at least 1% in the second quarter, Kenningham added.
In the first quarter, German GDP contracted by 1.8% on the quarter and by 3.1%
on the year, significantly weaker readings than the euro zone average.
On Monday, Chancellor Angela Merkel said at the virtual opening of a Bosch
semiconductor plant in Dresden that the chip shortages in manufacturing were
complicating Germany's economic recovery from the coronavirus crisis.
The problem has forced many German companies to announce short-time work and
scale back production, with the scarcity of components also expected to lead to
higher end-prices for consumers and overall inflationary pressures.
(Additional reporting by Paul CarrelEditing by Caroline Copley and Catherine
Evans)
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