Companies pledge to invest more than $700
billion in Germany over the next 3 years
[July 22, 2025]
BERLIN (AP) — A group of dozens of companies pledged Monday to
invest at least 631 billion euros ($733 billion) in Germany over the
next three years, sending a signal of confidence in Europe's biggest
economy as the new government tries to breathe new life into it.
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German Chancellor Friedrich Merz attends the annual press conference at
the Federal Press Conference in Berlin, Germany, Friday, July 18, 2025.
(AP Photo/Ebrahim Noroozi) |
The
economy has shrunk for the past two years and is expected to
stagnate this year. Chancellor Friedrich Merz's administration
has made revitalizing it a top priority since it took office May
6.
It has launched a program to encourage investment and set up a
500 billion euro fund to pour money into Germany’s creaking
infrastructure over the next 12 years. It is promising to cut
red tape and speed up the country's lagging digitization.
On Monday, Merz welcomed representatives of an initiative titled
“Made for Germany” to the chancellery to send a signal of
confidence from and to private investors. The group currently
includes 61 companies from across the economy, among them
industrial conglomerate Siemens and financial giant Deutsche
Bank.
“The investments by the initiative are a very powerful signal
that we are now experiencing a shift in sentiment and
consolidating it," Merz said. “The message ... is very clear:
Germany is back. It's worth investing in Germany again. We are
not a location of the past, but a location of the present and
above all the future.”
He stressed that private investment is crucial to encouraging
growth.
The overall figure pledged Monday includes at least some already
planned investments. Merz said the plans include investments in
new facilities and in modernizing infrastructure, in research
and development.
Deutsche Bank CEO Christian Sewing praised the new government as
being “determined to end the reform backlog that has slowed us
down for too long.” But he said that it still needs to do more,
and the companies “encouraged” the government “to continue the
course of reform.”
“Our priorities are clear: We want economic growth, we want to
strengthen Germany's competitiveness, we want to defend or
further expand our technological leadership and we want to bring
our infrastructure into the digital age,” Siemens CEO Roland
Busch said.
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