News

A full EU embargo on Russian energy would trigger a major recession in Germany, sending output down 2.2 per cent next year and wiping out more than 400,000 jobs, according to the country’s top economic institutes.

The new forecast released on Wednesday was more pessimistic than most earlier economic studies and could give cover for Chancellor Olaf Scholz’s government to push back against calls for an immediate ban on Russian oil and gas imports, on which Germany is heavily reliant.

The EU last week agreed to ban coal imports from Russia from August. Some member states have called for the bloc to go further by banning oil and gas imports, but Berlin has resisted such a move, arguing that it would be too economically damaging for German businesses and consumers.

Five of Germany’s top economic research institutes predicted that if all energy supplies from Russia were cut off instantly, growth in Europe’s largest economy would slow sharply from 2.9 per cent last year to 1.9 per cent this year, before shrinking 2.2 per cent in 2023.

“If gas supplies were to be cut off, the German economy would undergo a sharp recession,” said Stefan Kooths, vice-president of the Kiel Institute for the World Economy.

The forecast contraction would be less severe than the 4.6 per cent drop in gross domestic product caused by the fallout from the coronavirus pandemic in 2020. But the economists said the cumulative impact over two years would be greater.

“You can also calculate it like this: Germany would forfeit €220bn in economic output in 2022 and 2023, which is equivalent to 6.5 per cent of GDP,” added Kooths.

Marcel Fratzscher, head of the German Institute for Economic Research, said an immediate Russian energy embargo would “have a much longer lasting impact and cause more collateral damage to the economy than the pandemic, when people were rehired quite quickly”.

“The major concern is that this would permanently erode the competitiveness of German industry, particularly in sectors like chemicals, but also steelmaking and fertiliser production,” Fratzscher told the Financial Times.

The institutes forecast that an immediate end to Russian energy imports would drive up the number of unemployed people in Germany from 2.37mn this year to 2.79mn next year. Inflation would hit a full-year record of 7.3 per cent in 2022, before dropping to 5 per cent next year, they estimated.

Pressure is mounting on the government after three German backbench MPs who chair the parliamentary committees on foreign affairs, defence and Europe called for an embargo on Russian oil as soon as possible after visiting Ukraine on Tuesday.

However, a survey by the Allensbach Institute published on Wednesday found that 30 per cent of Germans expressed support for an immediate ban on all Russian energy imports and only 24 per cent agreed with the statement: “We can freeze for freedom.”

Half of German gas and thermal coal imports last year came from Russia, which also supplies a third of the country’s oil imports. Berlin plans to diversify away from Russian oil by the end of this year and from its gas in two years.

Even if Russian oil and gas imports continue to flow, the institutes said Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, supply chain bottlenecks caused by the pandemic and soaring inflation would weigh on output. They cut their baseline forecast for German growth this year to 2.7 per cent — down from their October forecast of 4.8 per cent.

The new projections were submitted to the government by the German Institute for Eco­nomic Research, the Ifo Institute, the Kiel Institute for the World Economy, the Halle Institute for Economic Research and RWI.

Earlier studies, including those published by the German National Academy of Sciences Leopoldina and Econtribute, forecast that cutting off Russian energy supplies would be “manageable” for the economy and would knock 0.5 per cent to 3 per cent off Germany’s GDP.

Articles You May Like

More homeowners just started pulling cash out of their properties. Here’s why.
Los Angeles Unified asks voters to approve $9 billion of school bonds
The Maga court: inside Donald Trump’s new White House
Mortgage rates surge higher on Trump victory, causing housing stocks to fall
Average age of first-time homebuyers is 38, an all-time high. Here’s what that says about the real estate market