Germans spending less as soaring power, food costs gnaw finances
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[December 01, 2022] By
Mathis Richtmann
BERLIN (Reuters) - For 25 years, Theo Jost served the German Christmas
dish of goose in his restaurant near the Black Forest. The birds were
fresh, reared by farmers in northern Germany. But this year he took the
dish off the menu because rising costs all along the supply chain would
have doubled its price compared to last year.
"I said to my son: 'We can't expect our guests to pay 60-70 euros
($62-75) for a serving of goose,'" Jost told Reuters.
That would be beyond the budgets of Germans looking to cut back on
non-essentials amid a cost of living crisis fuelled by rising energy
prices. They surged as the world emerged from pandemic lockdowns in 2021
and have been pushed yet higher in the stand-off between gas-rich Russia
and the West.
Germans interviewed by Reuters said they were putting off spending
decisions as inflation bit into their income, while a broad range of
economic data suggest the picture will not improve for months into 2023.
Heavily dependent on Russian gas, Germany saw inflation at 11.3% in
November according to the official European Union-wide harmonised
measure - higher than the 10% average among countries that use the euro
and well above the 7.1% of neighbour France.
It is set to become the biggest Group of Seven economy to fall into
recession next year. The International Monetary Fund sees output
shrinking 0.3% compared to albeit modest average growth of 1.1% across
its benchmark of advanced economies.
As Europe's largest economy, high inflation and weak growth in Germany
matter for the region: on the one hand, it could help prompt the
European Central Bank towards tighter policy; on the other, it drags on
overall activity.
While its dependence on Russian energy is already stoking fears of
long-term damage to Germany's industrial might, the 43.5 percent annual
increase it has seen in energy prices is also hitting consumers hard,
fuelling wider price increases and biting into their disposable income.
"This is not just your regular recession," says Ulrike Malmendier, an
economics professor at the University of California, Berkeley who is a
member of Germany's SVR council of economic experts that advises the
government on policy.
"We are dealing with the fact that we will have long term, significantly
higher energy prices," Malmendier told Reuters, adding that this could
have a similarly long-term impact on consumer spending, which
policy-makers would need to address.
DELAYED FUEL BILL SHOCK
Already, the SVR sees weak private consumption scraping 0.3 percentage
points off total German growth in 2023, contributing to the recession
that the IMF and others now predict.
As in other European countries, German wages adjusted for inflation were
lower in mid-2022 than at the end of 2019, according to SVR figures.
But recent wage deals suggest they have more to fall: an agreement
struck by the IG Metall trade union in southwest Germany that will set a
trend for other deals fell short of inflation with a cumulative 8.5%
increase spread over two years.
While some economists see inflation in Germany peaking by early next
year, a number of domestic factors mean its impact on consumers will
resonate for months to come in a country with a deep-seated cultural
aversion to price rises.
Tobias Rademacher, a software developer from Leipzig, just received his
new power bills for the upcoming year. He says he will have to set aside
twice as much of his income to cover the bills in 2023, compared to this
year.
But, in common with many in the local rental sector, his biggest fear is
what comes later that year. German tenants pay monthly heating bills to
their landlords – priced depending on the usage in the previous year. At
some point in 2023, he and hundreds of thousands of others will receive
a bill for his 2022 heating to recover additional costs from rising
prices.
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People walk through the Mall of Berlin
shopping centre during its opening night in Berlin, Germany,
September 24, 2014. REUTERS/Thomas Peter
"For now, I’ve decided against planning a major vacation next year,
because you simply don’t know what you’re up against,” the
42-year-old told Reuters, adding that even with what he calls a
comfortable salary, he was also putting a new bicycle on hold.
Rademacher is not alone. Travel bookings are down 15% on last year,
German travel agency ta.ts says, while OpenTable data point to a
trend downwards in restaurant reservations.
The HDE retail association has warned its sector faces the biggest
slump in Christmas sales this year since 2007. Discount retailer
Primark said in November it was looking to reduce its presence in
Germany as it grappled with weak sales and rising costs.
There is no easy fix to Germany's energy problem, with research
group Prognos predicting wholesale power prices rising to twice
their pre-Ukraine war levels by the end of 2023.
Joerg Angelé, senior economist at asset manager Bantleon, says he
expects consumers to keep saving on non-essentials.
"You can’t save on power or gas, and those are going to be more
expensive next year," Angelé said. "I fear that housing rents are
going to increase more over the next years, and you cannot save on
groceries."
TOO LATE WITH STATE SUPPORT?
This bleak consumer sentiment is mirrored in polls conducted by the
GfK research group. Latest figures showed a slight uptick in
consumer sentiment compared to October. But the sentiment remains at
some of the lowest levels of the past two decades.
The low morale readings were further underlined in a recent
cross-country study by EY consultancy which showed that 23% of
Germans fear for their finances compared to just 16% in France.
That may come as no surprise. Not just energy costs but also food
prices have increased more in Germany than in France: 18.9% in
Germany in October compared to 12.9% in France, according to a
harmonised index.
This is all the more of a shock in the land of low-cost retail
forerunners like Aldi and Lidl because Germans for years could rely
on relatively cheap groceries.
Hitting all food-importing nations, the war in Ukraine stifled
supply of sunflower oil and raised prices for fertilizer, feed, and
energy, necessary for the heating of barns, running production
facilities, and transportation.
Local food industry officials also point to a recent move to
increase Germany’s minimum wage to 12 euros per hour, adding more
costs to production.
National policy has been a factor too. Some point to Germany’s late
move to cap energy prices and contrast it with the much earlier move
by France to support consumers with subsidies at petrol pumps and
elsewhere.
Jeromin Zettelmeyer, director of the Brussels-based Bruegel think
tank, said France may have acted faster because of "the higher
sensitivity" to social unrest after the "gilets jaunes" (yellow
vest) protests launched in 2018 against a government attempt to hike
energy taxes.
All these factors are combining to make Germans more worried about
inflation going forward: Five-year inflation expectations of German
households stood at 6 percent in September, according to the OECD.
The ECB reports three-year inflation expectations of European
consumers as a whole at 3 percent.
Referring to ECB projections of returning to target inflation rates
soon, Malmendier said: "I'm a little worried that they're too
optimistic."
(Reporting by Mathis Richtmann; Graphics by Pasit Kongkunakornkul
and Sumanta Sen; editing by Mark John and Ross Colvin)
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