Finance & economics | How the wheels came off

The German economy: from European leader to laggard

Its problems are deep-rooted, knotty and show little sign of being fixed

A Volkswagen Beetle in the colours of the German flag, with smoke billowing out of the engine
Image: Ellie Foreman-Peck
|Berlin

The 2010s were Germany’s decade. A Jobwunder (employment miracle) that began in the 2000s reached full flower, largely unimpeded by the global financial crisis of 2007-09, as labour reforms introduced by Gerhard Schröder, chancellor from 1998 to 2005, combined with China’s demand for manufactured goods and a boom in emerging markets to add 7m jobs. From the mid-2000s to the end of the 2010s, Germany’s economy grew by 24%, compared with 22% in Britain and 18% in France. Angela Merkel, chancellor from 2005 to 2021, was lauded for her grown-up leadership. Populism of the Trump-Brexit variety was believed to be a problem for other countries. Germany’s social model, built upon close relationships between unions and employers, and its co-operative federalism, which spread growth across the country, wowed commentators, who published books with titles such as “Why the Germans Do It better”. Germany’s footballers even won the World Cup.

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This article appeared in the Finance & economics section of the print edition under the headline “How the wheels came off”

From the August 19th 2023 edition

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