Steepest plunge in German exports since records began

Coronavirus crisis reduced demand for goods from Europe’s biggest economy

The German government expects the economy to shrink by a post-second World War record.
The German government expects the economy to shrink by a post-second World War record.

German exports tumbled by 11.8 per cent in March, their steepest drop since current records began in 1990, as the coronavirus crisis reduced demand for goods from Europe's biggest economy, the Federal Statistics Office said on Friday.

Seasonally adjusted imports fell by 5.1 per cent and the trade surplus narrowed to €12.8 billion ($13.88 billion) from a downwardly revised €21.4 billion in the prior month, the office said.

Economists polled by Reuters had expected exports to fall by 5 per cent and saw imports down 4 per cent. The trade surplus was expected to come in at €18.9 billion.

The German government expects the economy, which has traditionally been dependent on exports, to shrink by a post-second World War record of 6.3 per cent despite a massive rescue package of €750 billion to cushion the impact of the pandemic.

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Economists expect any recovery to be slow and the pace of an economic rebound will largely depend on how fast Germany’s European neighbours and other trade partners like China and the United States emerge from the crisis.

“The interdependence of the global economy will be fatal for the export sector during the coronavirus crisis,” Alexander Krueger of Bankhaus Lampe wrote in a note, adding that the worst was still to come. – Reuters