EU: Family Ties with Rich Cousin Germany Turn Bittersweet

  •  berlin
  • Inter Press Service

- In terms of economics, the European Union (EU) includes one country - Germany - that is both friend and foe to the 27-member community, and their relationship has turned markedly bittersweet on the road to recovery after the global economic crisis.

On the one hand, German economic strength, as expressed by the country’s international trade surplus, is only possible at the cost of most of its EU partners. They are weaker than ever before after the crisis as many of them were on the brink of collapse.

On the other hand, without Germany’s massive financial support - in terms of bailing out Irish banks and avoiding Greece’s state bankruptcy - the European continent would have fallen into an economic abyss. Germany’s Janus-faced partnership within the EU and, in particular, within the 17-member European Monetary Union (EMU), also known as the Euro zone, is even more noticeable now.

Recently official data has confirmed that Germany came out of the 2009 recession stronger than before. In 2009, as a consequence of the global economic crisis, the German gross domestic product (GDP) shrank by almost five percent, making it one of the most severe recessions in the industrialised world. But only one year later, Germany began growing again - by 3.3 percent - and is likely to continue at the same pace into the foreseeable future.

Most forecasts predict an economic growth in Germany between 2.5 and 3 percent in 2011. This strong recovery has been possible thanks to the proverbial might of German industrial exports. While domestic demand continues to stagnate, German exports have soared. And the clients are mostly its EMU partners.

Even in the crisis year of 2009, Germany exported goods and services worth 1.1 trillion U.S. dollars - some 125 billion dollars higher than U.S. exports. This enormous export strength is even more impressive considering that Germany has a population of 82 million compared with the U.S. population of 310 million.

In 2009, Germany scored trade surpluses with practically all members of the Euro zone, with the exception of the Republic of Ireland, the Netherlands and Slovakia. In effect, the German trade surplus within the Euro zone means that almost all other member countries had a trade deficit.

In addition, because of the common currency they share with Germany, Euro zone members cannot take the most obvious route to international competitiveness — automatic devaluation in floating exchange rates. For most Euro zone country members, sharing a common currency with Germany is a trap. For Germany, it guarantees that the country can continue exporting without fearing retaliation by way of competitive devaluation.

This explains why Germany is willing to pay the lion’s share of the European bailout package set last May to support state finances in several EU member countries such as Spain, Greece, Ireland, and Portugal. It contributes to financial stability across Europe. The bailout package was revised this month by European heads of government. The mechanism will become permanent beginning in 2013, and amount to 500 billion Euros.

At the same time, the EU has been searching for a way out of this dilemma - a way to cope with German industrial production and trade hegemony within the region, and simultaneously guarantee that state deficits in more fragile member countries remain controllable.

© Inter Press Service (2011) — All Rights Reserved. Original source: Inter Press Service

Where next?

Advertisement