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Economy of Germany

The economy of Germany is a highly developed social market economy.[21] It has the largest national economy in Europe, the third-largest by nominal GDP in the world, and fifth by GDP (PPP). Due to a volatile currency exchange rate, Germany's GDP as measured in dollars fluctuates sharply. In 2017, the country accounted for 28% of the euro area economy according to the International Monetary Fund (IMF).[22] Germany is a founding member of the European Union and the Eurozone.[23][24]

Economy of Germany
CurrencyEuro (EUR, €)
Calendar year
Trade organisations
EU, WTO, G-20, G7 and OECD
Country group
Statistics
Population84,270,625 (2022)[4]
GDP
GDP rank
GDP growth
  • 1.8% (2022)
  • −0.5% (2023)
  • 0.9% (2024)[5]
GDP per capita
  • $52,800 (nominal; 2023)[5]
  • $66,000 (PPP; 2023)[5]
GDP per capita rank
GDP by sector
GDP by component
  • Household consumption: 53.1%
  • Government consumption: 19.5%
  • Investment in fixed capital: 20.4%
  • Investment in inventories: −0.5%
  • Exports of goods and services: 47.3%
  • Imports of goods and services: −38.7%
  • (2017)[3]
  • 8.7% (2022)
  • 6.3% (2023)
  • 3.5% (2024)[5]
Population below poverty line
13% at risk of poverty or social exclusion (AROPE, 2019)[6]
29.7 low (2019)[7]
Labour force
  • 50 million (2023)[10]
  • 68.3% employment rate (August 2020)[10]
Labour force by occupation
Unemployment
  • 5.4% (2022)[10]
  • 5.8% youth unemployment (August 2020)[10]
  • 2.0 million unemployed (August 2020)[10]
Average gross salary
€4,323 monthly
€2,781 monthly
Main industries
External
Exports$1.62 trillion (2022)[11][3]
Export goods
motor vehicles, machinery, chemicals, computer and electronic products, electrical equipment, pharmaceuticals, metals, transport equipment, foodstuffs, textiles, rubber and plastic products
Main export partners
Imports$1.17 trillion (2022)[12][3]
Import goods
machinery, data processing equipment, vehicles, chemicals, oil and gas, metals, electric equipment, pharmaceuticals, foodstuffs, agricultural products
Main import partners
FDI stock
  • $1.653 trillion (2017)[3]
  • Abroad: $2.298 trillion (2017)[3]
$280 billion (2019)[3]
$5.4 trillion (2022)[13]
Public finances
  • 59.8% of GDP (2019)[14]
  • €2.053 trillion (2019)[14]
  • €49.8 billion surplus (2019)[14]
  • +1.4% of GDP (2019)[14]
Revenues50% of GDP (2023)[14]
Expenses45.4% of GDP (2019)[14]
Economic aid
$400 billion (2022)[20]

All values, unless otherwise stated, are in US dollars.

In 2016, Germany recorded the highest trade surplus in the world, worth $310 billion.[25] This economic result made it the biggest capital exporter globally.[26] Germany is one of the largest exporters globally with $1.81 trillion worth of goods and services exported in 2019.[27][28] The service sector contributes around 70% of the total GDP, industry 29.1%, and agriculture 0.9%. Exports accounted for 50.3% of national output.[29][30] The top 10 exports of Germany are vehicles, machinery, chemical goods, electronic products, electrical equipment, pharmaceuticals, transport equipment, basic metals, food products, and rubber and plastics.[31] The economy of Germany is the largest manufacturing economy in Europe, and it is less likely to be affected by a financial downturn.[32] Germany conducts applied research with practical industrial value and sees itself as a bridge between the latest university insights and industry-specific product and process improvements. It generates a great deal of knowledge in its own laboratories.[33]

Germany is rich in timber, lignite, potash, and salt. Some minor sources of natural gas are being exploited in the state of Lower Saxony. Until German reunification, the German Democratic Republic mined for uranium in the Ore Mountains (see also: SAG/SDAG Wismut). Energy in Germany is sourced predominantly by fossil fuels (30%), with wind power in second place, then nuclear power, gas, solar, biomass (wood and biofuels), and hydro.[34] Germany is the first major industrialised nation to commit to the renewable energy transition called Energiewende. Germany is the leading producer of wind turbines in the world.[35] Renewables produced 46% of electricity consumed in Germany (as of 2019).[36] 99 per cent of all German companies belong to the German "Mittelstand", small and medium-sized enterprises, which are mostly family-owned. Of the world's 2000 largest publicly listed companies measured by revenue, the Fortune Global 2000, 53 are headquartered in Germany, with the top 10 being the following: Allianz, one of the world's largest insurance companies and one of the largest financial services groups, largest in Europe; Munich Re, also one of the largest insurance companies; Daimler, Volkswagen, and BMW, among the biggest car markers in the world;[37] Siemens, the world's biggest industrial machinery company; Deutsche Telekom, one of the world's largest telecommunication companies; Bayer, among the biggest biomedical companies; BASF, the world's 2nd biggest chemical producer; and SAP, Europe's biggest software company.[38]

Germany is the world's top location for trade fairs.[39] Around two thirds of the world's leading trade fairs take place in Germany.[40] The largest annual international trade fairs and congresses are held in several German cities such as Hanover, Frankfurt, Cologne, Leipzig, and Düsseldorf.

History edit

 
Real GDP per capita development in Germany since 1820

Age of Industrialisation edit


The Industrial Revolution in Germany got underway approximately a century later than in the United Kingdom, France, and Belgium, partly because Germany only became a unified country in 1871.[41]

The establishment of the Deutscher Zollverein (German Customs Union) in 1834 and the expansion of railway systems were the main drivers of Germany's industrial development and political union. From 1834, tariff barriers between increasing numbers of the Kleindeutschland German states were eliminated.[citation needed] In 1835 the first German railway linked the Franconian cities of Nuremberg and Fürth – it proved so successful that the decade of the 1840s saw "railway mania" in all the German states. Between 1845 and 1870, 8,000 kilometres (5,000 mi) of rail had been built and in 1850 Germany was building its own locomotives. Over time, other German states joined the customs union and started linking their railroads, which began to connect the corners of Germany. The growth of free trade and a rail system across Germany intensified economic development which opened up new markets for local products, created a pool of middle managers,[clarification needed] increased the demand for engineers, architects, and skilled machinists, and stimulated investments in coal and iron.[42]

Another factor that propelled German industry forward was the unification of the monetary system, made possible in part by political unification. The Deutsche Mark, a new monetary coinage system backed by gold, was introduced in 1871. However, this system did not fully come into use as silver coins retained their value until 1907.[citation needed]

The victory of Prussia and her allies over Napoleon III of France in the Franco-Prussian War of 1870-1871 marked the end of French hegemony in Europe and resulted in the proclamation of the German Empire in 1871. The establishment of the empire inherently presented Europe with the reality of a new populous and industrialising polity possessing a considerable, and undeniably increasing, economic and diplomatic presence. The influence of French economic principles produced important institutional reforms in Germany, including the abolition of feudal restrictions on the sale of large landed estates, the reduction of the power of the guilds in the cities, and the introduction of a new, more efficient commercial law. Nonetheless, political decisions about the economy of the empire were still largely controlled by a coalition of "rye and iron", that is the Prussian Junker landowners of the east and the Ruhr heavy industry of the west.[43]

Regarding politics and society, between 1881 and 1889 Chancellor Otto von Bismarck promoted laws that provided social insurance and improved working conditions. He instituted the world's first welfare state. Germany was the first to introduce social insurance programmes including universal healthcare, compulsory education, sickness insurance, accident insurance, disability insurance, and a retirement pension. Moreover, the government's universal education policy bore fruit with Germany achieving[when?] the highest literacy rate in the world – 99% – education levels that provided the nation with more people good at handling numbers, more engineers, chemists, opticians, skilled workers for its factories, skilled managers, knowledgeable farmers, and skilled military personnel.[44]

By 1900, Germany surpassed Britain in steel production and became the largest producer behind only the United States. The German economic miracle was also intensified by unprecedented population growth from 35 million in 1850 to 67 million in 1913. From 1895 to 1907, the number of workers engaged in machine building doubled from half a million to well over a million. Only 40 per cent of Germans lived in rural areas by 1910, a drop from 67% at the birth of the Empire. Industry accounted for 60 per cent of the gross national product in 1913.[45] The German chemical industry became the most advanced in the world, and by 1914 the country was producing half the world's electrical equipment.

The rapid advance to industrial maturity led to a drastic shift in Germany's economic situation – from a rural economy into a major exporter of finished goods. The ratio of the finished product to total exports jumped from 38% in 1872 to 63% in 1912. By 1913 Germany had come to dominate all the European markets. By 1914 Germany had become one of the biggest exporters in the world.[46]

Weimar Republic and Third Reich edit

 
Gross national product and GNP deflator, year on year change in %, 1926 to 1939, in Germany. Via google to Pdf-file of German publication
 
Occupation by administrative district in the 1925 census

The Nazis rose to power while unemployment was very high,[47] but achieved full employment later thanks to massive public works programmes such as the Reichsbahn, Reichspost, and the Reichsautobahn projects.[48] In 1935 rearmament in contravention of the Treaty of Versailles added to the economy.[47][49]

The post-1931 financial crisis economic policies of expansionary fiscal policies (as Germany was off the gold standard) was advised by their non-Nazi Minister of Economics, Hjalmar Schacht,[47] who in 1933 became the president of the central bank. Schacht later resigned from the post in 1938 and was replaced by Hermann Göring.

The trading policies of the Third Reich aimed at self-sufficiency but with a lack of raw materials Germany would have to maintain trade links but on bilateral preferences, foreign exchange controls, import quotas, and export subsidies under what was called the "New Plan"(Neuer Plan) of 19 September 1934.[50] The "New Plan" was based on trade with less developed countries who would trade raw materials for German industrial goods saving currency.[51] Southern Europe was preferable to Western Europe and North America as there could be no trade blockades.[52] This policy became known as the Grosswirtschaftsraum ("greater economic area") policy.

Eventually, the Nazi party developed strong relationships with big business[53] and abolished trade unions in 1933 in order to form the Reich Labour Service (RAD), German Labour Front (DAF) to set working hours, Beauty of Labour (SDA) which set working conditions, and Strength through Joy (KDF) to ensure sports clubs for workers.[54]

West Germany edit

 
The Volkswagen Beetle was an icon of West German reconstruction.

Beginning with the replacement of the Reichsmark with the Deutsche Mark as legal tender, a lasting period of low inflation and rapid industrial growth was overseen by the government led by German Chancellor Konrad Adenauer and his minister of economics, Ludwig Erhard, raising West Germany from total wartime devastation to one of the most developed nations in modern Europe.

In 1953 it was decided that Germany was to repay $1.1 billion of the aid it had received. The last repayment was made in June 1971.

Apart from these factors, hard work and long hours at full capacity among the population in the 1950s, 1960s, and early 1970s and extra labour supplied by thousands of Gastarbeiter ("guest workers") provided a vital base for the economic upturn.

East Germany edit

By the early 1950s, the Soviet Union had seized reparations in the form of agricultural and industrial products and demanded further heavy reparation payments.[55] Silesia with the Upper Silesian Coal Basin, and Stettin, a prominent natural port, were lost to Poland.

Exports from West Germany exceeded $323 billion in 1988. In the same year, East Germany exported $30.7 billion worth of goods; 65% to other communist states.[56] East Germany had zero unemployment.[56]

Federal Republic edit

 
As of 2013, Germany is the third-largest exporter and third-largest importer in the world, producing the largest trade surplus as a national economy.

The German economy practically stagnated in the beginning of the 2000s. The worst growth figures were achieved in 2002 (+1.4%), in 2003 (+1.0%), and in 2005 (+1.4%).[57] Unemployment was also chronically high.[58] Due to these problems, together with Germany's aging population, the welfare system came under considerable strain. This led the government to push through a wide-ranging programme of belt-tightening reforms, Agenda 2010, including the labour market reforms known as Hartz I - IV.[58]

In the later part of the first decade of 2000, the world economy experienced high growth, from which Germany as a leading exporter also profited. Some credit the Hartz reforms with achieving high growth and declining unemployment but others contend that they resulted in a massive decrease in standards of living and that its effects are limited and temporary.[58]

The nominal GDP of Germany contracted in the second and third quarters of 2008, putting the country in a technical recession following a global and European recession cycle.[59] German industrial output dropped to 3.6% in September vis-à-vis August.[60][61] In January 2009 the German government under Angela Merkel approved a €50 billion ($70 billion) economic stimulus plan to protect several sectors from a downturn and a subsequent rise in unemployment rates.[62] Germany exited the recession in the second and third quarters of 2009, mostly due to rebounding manufacturing orders and exports - primarily from outside the Eurozone - and relatively steady consumer demand.[58]

Germany is a founding member of the EU, the G8, and the G20, and was the world's largest exporter from 2003 to 2008. In 2011 it remained the third largest exporter[63] and third largest importer.[64] Most of the country's exports are in engineering, especially machinery, automobiles, chemical goods, and metals.[65] Germany is a leading producer of wind turbines and solar-power technology.[66] Annual trade fairs and congresses are held in cities throughout Germany.[67] 2011 was a record-breaking year for the German economy. German companies exported goods worth over €1 trillion ($1.3 trillion), the highest figure in history. The number of people in work has risen to 41.6 million, the highest recorded figure.[68]

Through 2012, Germany's economy continued to be stronger relative to local neighbouring nations.[69] In 2023, Germany experienced economic difficulties as a result of the closure of Russian natural gas resources due to Western sanctions following the Russian invasion of Ukraine.[70] Germany imported 55% of its gas from Russia at the time when Russia started the invasion in 2022.[71] Amid a global energy crisis, Chancellor Olaf Scholz committed to weaken dependence on Russian energy imports by halting certification of Nord Stream 2, while also committing to his long-term predecessor Angela Merkel's policy of phasing out nuclear energy. [72][73][74]

As of December 2023, Germany is the third largest economy in nominal terms in the world after the United States and China, and the largest economy in Europe. It is the third largest export nation in the world.[75]

Data edit

The following table shows the main economic indicators in 1980–2021 (with IMF staff estimates in 2022–2027). Inflation below 5% is in green.[76]

Year GDP

(in Bil. US$PPP)

GDP per capita

(in US$ PPP)

GDP

(in Bil. US$nominal)

GDP per capita

(in US$ nominal)

GDP growth

(real)

Inflation rate

(in Per cent)

Unemployment

(in Per cent)

Government debt

(in % of GDP)

1980 855.3 11,130.4 853.7 11,109.7  1.3%  5.4% 3.4% n/a
1981  937.2  12,174.0  718.3  9,329.6  0.1%  6.3%  4.8% n/a
1982  987.3  12,833.5  693.5  9,015.0  -0.8%  5.3%  6.7% n/a
1983  1,041.9  13,590.8  691.9  9,025.2  1.6%  3.3%  8.1% n/a
1984  1,110.0  14,537.9  651.9  8,537.8  2.8%  2.4%  8.1% n/a
1985  1,170.2  15,364.3  661.0  8,678.9  2.2%  2.1%  8.1% n/a
1986  1,222.7  16,041.5  944.1  12,387.0  2.4%  -0.1%  7.8% n/a
1987  1,271.3  16,676.8  1,174.9  15,411.5  1.5%  0.2%  7.8% n/a
1988  1,365.3  17,801.4  1,266.6  16,514.7  3.7%  1.3%  7.7% n/a
1989  1,474.4  19,033.2  1,257.4  16,232.1  3.9%  2.8%  6.8% n/a
1990  1,617.1  20,482.9  1,598.6  20,249.1  5.7%  2.7%  6.2% n/a
1991  1,755.6  21,951.9  1,875.6  23,453.1  5.0%  3.5%  5.5% 39.0%
1992  1,830.0  22,733.4  2,136.3  26,538.0  1.9%  5.0%  6.6%  41.5%
1993  1,855.1  22,917.9  2,072.5  25,603.0  -1.0%  4.5%  7.8%  45.1%
1994  1,940.2  23,909.4  2,209.9  27,233.5  2.4%  2.7%  8.4%  47.5%
1995  2,011.4  24,738.0  2,588.0  31,829.6  1.5%  1.7%  8.2%  54.9%
1996  2,064.9  25,347.0  2,498.1  30,664.3  0.8%  1.3%  8.9%  57.8%
1997  2,138.0  26,230.3  2,214.7  27,170.7  1.8%  1.5%  9.7%  58.9%
1998  2,205.8  27,082.8  2,242.1  27,528.2  2.0%  0.6%  9.4%  59.5%
1999  2,279.1  27,990.7  2,197.1  26,984.2  1.9%  0.6%  8.6%  60.4%
2000  2,398.4  29,443.7  1,948.8  23,924.9  2.9%  1.4%  8.0%  59.3%
2001  2,493.8  30,592.1  1,945.8  23,869.8  1.7%  1.9%  7.8%  58.2%
2002  2,527.6  30,983.3  2,077.0  25,460.3  -0.2%  1.3%  8.6%  59.9%
2003  2,559.3  31,384.1  2,501.0  30,668.8  -0.7%  1.1%  9.7%  63.5%
2004  2,659.2  32,645.2  2,813.1  34,534.8  1.2%  1.8%  10.3%  65.2%
2005  2,762.5  33,963.1  2,848.4  35,020.2  0.7%  1.9%  11.0%  67.5%
2006  2,956.3  36,419.4  2,994.9  36,894.5  3.8%  1.8%  10.0%  66.9%
2007  3,126.7  38,605.1  3,426.0  42,299.9  3.0%  2.3%  8.5%  64.2%
2008  3,217.3  39,835.3  3,744.9  46,367.9  1.0%  2.8%  7.4%  65.7%
2009  3,053.5  37,939.0  3,407.6  42,338.7  -5.7%  0.2%  7.2%  73.2%
2010  3,219.5  40,100.8  3,402.4  42,379.7  4.2%  1.1%  6.6%  82.0%
2011  3,415.0  42,541.2  3,748.7  46,697.4  3.9%  2.5%  5.5%  79.4%
2012  3,487.2  43,359.4  3,529.4  43,883.4  0.4%  2.2%  5.1%  80.7%
2013  3,628.6  44,993.7  3,733.9  46,299.4  0.4%  1.6%  5.0%  78.3%
2014  3,807.1  47,011.1  3,890.1  48,035.8  2.2%  0.8%  4.7%  75.3%
2015  3,890.1  47,622.3  3,357.9  41,107.2  1.5%  0.7%  4.4%  71.9%
2016  4,164.7  50,574.2  3,468.9  42,124.2  2.2%  0.4%  3.9%  69.0%
2017  4,411.7  53,373.9  3,689.5  44,636.8  2.7%  1.7%  3.6%  64.6%
2018  4,561.6  55,021.0  3,976.2  47,961.0  1.0%  1.9%  3.2%  61.3%
2019  4,692.1  56,468.0  3,888.7  46,798.8  1.1%  1.4%  3.0%  58.9%
2020  4,573.3  54,993.4  3,886.6  46,735.3  -3.7%  0.4%  3.6%  68.0%
2021  4,888.4  58,757.2  4,262.8  51,237.6  2.6%  3.2%  3.6%  69.6%
2022  5,316.9  63,834.9  4,031.1  48,397.8  1.5%  8.5%  2.9%  71.1%
2023  5,490.2  65,865.3  4,120.2  49,430.1  -0.3%  7.2%  3.4%  68.3%
2024  5,689.6  68,235.1  4,337.4  52,017.6  1.5%  3.5%  3.3%  65.6%
2025  5,920.6  71,011.2  4,546.5  54,530.9  2.2%  2.6%  3.2%  63.1%
2026  6,143.0  73,716.8  4,740.7  56,889.6  1.8%  2.0%  3.0%  61.0%
2027  6,346.0  76,204.6  4,925.0  59,140.7  1.3%  2.0%  3.0%  59.7%

Companies edit

Of the world's 500 largest stock-market-listed companies measured by revenue in 2010, the Fortune Global 500, 37 are headquartered in Germany. 40 Germany-based companies are included in the DAX, the most popular German stock market index. Well-known global brands are Mercedes-Benz, BMW, SAP, Siemens, Volkswagen, Adidas, Audi, Allianz, Porsche, Bayer, BASF, Bosch, and Nivea.[77]

Germany is recognised for its specialised small and medium enterprises, known as the Mittelstand model. SMEs account for more than 99 per cent of German companies.[78] Around 1,000 of these companies are global market leaders in their segment and are labelled hidden champions.[79]

From 1991 to 2010, 40,301 mergers and acquisitions with an involvement of German firms with a total known value of 2,422 bil. EUR have been announced.[80] The largest transactions[81] since 1991 are: the acquisition of Mannesmann by Vodafone for 204.8 bil. EUR in 1999, the merger of Daimler-Benz with Chrysler to form DaimlerChrysler in 1998 valued at 36.3 bil. EUR.

Berlin developed an international startup ecosystem and became a leading location for venture capital funded firms in the European Union.[82]

The sector with the highest number of companies registered in Germany is Services with 1,443,708 companies followed by Finance, Insurance, and Real Estate and Construction with 480,593 and 173,167 companies respectively.[83]

 
Volkswagen headquarters in Wolfsburg

The list includes the largest German companies by revenue in 2011:

Rank[84] Name Headquarters Ticker Revenue
(Mil. €)
Profit
(Mil. €)
Employees
(World)
01. Volkswagen Group Wolfsburg VOWG 159,000 15,800 502,000
02. E.ON Essen EONGn 113,000 −1,900 79,000
03. Daimler Stuttgart DAIGn 107,000 6,000 271,000
04. Siemens Berlin, München SIEGn 74,000 6,300 360,000
05. BASF Ludwigshafen am Rhein BASFn 73,000 6,600 111,000
06. BMW München BMWG 69,000 4,900 100,000
07. Metro Düsseldorf MEOG 67,000 740 288,000
08. Schwarz Gruppe Neckarsulm 63,000 N/A 315,000
09. Deutsche Telekom Bonn DTEGn 59,000 670 235,000
010. Deutsche Post Bonn DPWGn 53,000 1,300 471,000
Bosch Gerlingen 73,100 2,300 390,000
Uniper Düsseldorf UNSE01 67,300 13,000
Allianz München ALVG 104,000 2,800 141,000
Deutsche Bank Frankfurt am Main DBKGn 4,300 101,000

Mergers and acquisitions edit

Since German reunification, there have been 52,258 mergers or acquisitions deals inbound or outbound in Germany. The most active year in terms of value was 1999 with a cumulated value of 48. bil. EUR, twice as much as the runner up which was 2006 with 24. bil. EUR (see graphic "M&A in Germany").

Here is a list of the top 10 deals (ranked by value) that include a German company. The Vodafone - Mannesmann deal is still the biggest deal in global history.[85]

Rank Date Acquirer Acquirer Nation Target Target Nation Value (in bil. USD)
1 14 Nov 1999 Vodafone AirTouch PLC United Kingdom Mannesmann AG Germany 202.79
2 18 May 2016 Bayer AG Germany Monsanto Co United States 56.60
3 6 May 1998 Daimler-Benz AG Germany Chrysler Corp United States 40.47
4 16 Aug 2016 Linde AG Germany Praxair Inc United States 35.16
5 21 Oct 1999 Mannesmann AG Germany Orange PLC United Kingdom 32.59
6 24 Jul 2000 Deutsche Telekom AG Germany VoiceStream Wireless Corp United States 29.40
7 17 May 1999 Rhone-Poulenc SA France Hoechst AG Germany 21.92
8 23 Mar 2006 Bayer AG Germany Schering AG Germany 21.40
9 01 Apr 2001 Allianz AG Germany Dresdner Bank AG Germany 19.66
10 30 May 2005 Unicredito Italiano SpA Italy Bayerische Hypo- und Vereins Germany 18.26

Economic region edit

 
Germany is part of a monetary union, the Eurozone (dark blue), and of the EU single market.

Germany as a federation is a polycentric country and does not have a single economic centre. The stock exchange is located in Frankfurt am Main, the largest Media company (Bertelsmann SE & Co. KGaA) is headquartered in Gütersloh; the largest car manufacturers are in Wolfsburg (Volkswagen), Stuttgart (Mercedes-Benz and Porsche), and Munich (Audi and BMW).[86]

Germany is an advocate of closer European economic and political integration. Its commercial policies are increasingly determined by agreements among European Union (EU) members and EU single market legislation. Germany introduced the common European currency, the euro on 1 January 1999. Its monetary policy is set by the European Central Bank in Frankfurt.

The southern states ("Bundesländer"), especially Bayern, Baden-Württemberg, and Hessen, are economically stronger than the northern states. One of Germany's traditionally strongest (and at the same time oldest) economic regions is the Ruhr area in the west, between Duisburg and Dortmund. 27 of the country's 100 largest companies are located there. In recent years, however, the area, whose economy is based on natural resources and heavy industry, has seen a substantial rise in unemployment (2010: 8.7%).[86]

The economy of Bayern and Baden-Württemberg, the states with the lowest number of unemployed people (2018: 2.7%, 3.1%), on the other hand, is based on high-value products. Important sectors are automobiles, electronics, aerospace, and biomedicine, among others. Baden-Württemberg is an industrial centre especially for the automobile and machine-building industry and the home of brands like Mercedes-Benz (Daimler), Porsche and Bosch.[86]

With the reunification on 3 October 1990, Germany began the major task of reconciling the economic systems of the two former republics. Interventionist economic planning ensured gradual development in eastern Germany up to the level of former West Germany, but the standard of living and annual income remains significantly higher in western German states.[87] The modernisation and integration of the eastern German economy continues to be a long-term process scheduled to last until the year 2019, with annual transfers from west to east amounting to roughly $80 billion. The overall unemployment rate has consistently fallen since 2005 and reached a 20-year low in 2012. The country in July 2014 began legislating to introduce a federally mandated minimum wage which would come into effect on 1 January 2015.[88][needs update]

On 25 May 2023, a declaration of a recession in the German economy was made. It was reported that Gross Domestic Product (GDP) had contracted by 0.3% between January and March. This contraction was largely due to increased prices which discouraged consumer spending. The statistics office in Germany reported that household spending had dropped by 1.2% in the first quarter of the year.[89]

German states edit

List of German states by GRP in 2019
States Rank GRP
(in billions EUR€)
Share of
GDP (%)
  Germany 3,435.760 100
  North Rhine-Westphalia 1 711.419 21.2
  Bavaria 2 632.897 18.2
  Baden-Württemberg 3 524.325 15.1
  Lower Saxony 4 307.036 8.8
  Hesse 5 294.477 8.6
  Berlin 6 153.291 4.3
  Rhineland-Palatinate 7 145.003 4.2
  Saxony 8 128.097 3.8
  Hamburg 9 123.270 3.6
  Schleswig-Holstein 10 97.962 2.9
  Brandenburg 11 74.330 2.1
  Thuringia 12 63.866 1.9
  Saxony-Anhalt 13 63.545 1.9
  Mecklenburg-Vorpommern 14 46.567 1.3
  Saarland 15 36.253 1.1
  Bremen 16 33.623 1.0

Wealth edit

 
Hasso Plattner

The following top 10 list of German billionaires is based on an annual assessment of wealth and assets compiled and published by Forbes magazine on 1 March 2016.[90]

  1. $27.9 billion Albrecht family
  2. $20.3 billion Theo Albrecht Jr.
  3. $18.5 billion Susanne Klatten
  4. $18.1 billion Georg Schaeffler
  5. $16.4 billion Dieter Schwarz
  6. $15.6 billion Stefan Quandt
  7. $15.4 billion Michael Otto
  8. $11.7 billion Heinz Hermann Thiele
  9. $10 billion Klaus-Michael Kühne
  10. $9.5 billion Hasso Plattner

Wolfsburg is the city in Germany with the country's highest per capita GDP, at $128,000. The following top 10 list of German cities with the highest per capita GDP is based on a study by the Cologne Institute for Economic Research on 31 July 2013.[91]

  1. $128,000 Wolfsburg, Lower Saxony
  2. $114,281 Frankfurt am Main, Hesse
  3. $108,347 Schweinfurt, Bavaria
  4. $104,000 Ingolstadt, Bavaria
  5. $99,389 Regensburg, Bavaria
  6. $92,525 Düsseldorf, North Rhine-Westphalia
  7. $92,464 Ludwigshafen am Rhein, Rhineland-Palatinate
  8. $91,630 Erlangen, Bavaria
  9. $91,121 Stuttgart, Baden-Württemberg
  10. $88,692 Ulm, Baden-Württemberg

Sectors edit

 
German exports in 2006

Germany has a social market economy characterised by a highly qualified labour force, a developed infrastructure, a large capital stock, a low level of corruption,[92] and a high level of innovation.[93] It has the largest national economy in Europe, the third largest by nominal GDP in the world, and ranked fifth by GDP (PPP) in 2023.[5]

The service sector contributes around 70% of the total GDP, industry 29.1%, and agriculture 0.9%.[94]

Primary edit

In 2010 agriculture, forestry, and mining accounted for only 0.9% of Germany's gross domestic product (GDP) and employed only 2.4% of the population,[65] down from 4% in 1991. Agriculture is extremely productive, and Germany can cover 90% of its nutritional needs with domestic production. Germany is the third-largest agricultural producer in the European Union after France and Italy. Germany's principal agricultural products are potatoes, wheat, barley, sugar beets, fruit, and cabbages. [95]

Despite the country's high level of industrialisation, almost one-third of its territory is covered by forest.[96] The forestry industry provides for about two-thirds of domestic consumption of wood and wood products, so Germany is a net importer of these items.

 
Strip mining lignite at Tagebau Garzweiler near Grevenbroich, Germany

The German soil is relatively poor in raw materials. Only lignite (brown coal) and potash salt (Kalisalz) are available in significant quantities. However, the former GDR's Wismut mining company produced a total of 230,400 tonnes of uranium between 1947 and 1990 and made East Germany the fourth-largest producer of uranium ore worldwide (largest in USSR's sphere of control) at the time. Oil, natural gas, and other resources are, for the most part, imported from other countries.[97]

Potash salt is mined in the centre of the country (Niedersachsen, Sachsen-Anhalt, and Thüringen). The most important producer is K+S (formerly Kali und Salz AG).[97]

Germany's bituminous coal deposits were created more than 300 million years ago from swamps which extended from the present-day South England, over the Ruhr area to Poland. Lignite deposits developed similarly, but during a later period, about 66 million years ago. Because the wood is not yet completely transformed into coal, brown coal contains less energy than bituminous coal.[97]

Lignite is extracted in the extreme western and eastern parts of the country, mainly in Nordrhein-Westfalen, Sachsen, and Brandenburg. Considerable amounts are burned in coal plants near the mining areas, to produce electricity. Transporting lignite over far distances is not economically feasible, therefore the plants are located practically next to the extraction sites. Bituminous coal is mined in Nordrhein-Westfalen and Saarland. Most power plants burning bituminous coal operate on imported material, therefore the plants are located not only near to the mining sites, but throughout the country.[97]

In 2019, the country was the world's 3rd largest producer of selenium,[98] the world's 5th largest producer of potash,[99] the world's 5th largest producer of boron,[100] the world's 7th largest producer of lime,[101] the world's 13th largest producer of fluorspar,[102] the world's 14th largest producer of feldspar,[103] the world's 17th largest producer of graphite,[104] the world's 18th largest producer of sulfur,[105] in addition to being the 4th largest world producer of salt.[106]

Industry edit

 
The world's largest coherent chemistry plant BASF in Ludwigshafen

Industry and construction accounted for 30.7% of the gross domestic product in 2017 and employed 24.2% of the workforce.[3] Germany excels in the production of automobiles, machinery, electrical equipment, and chemicals. With the manufacture of 5.2 million vehicles in 2009, Germany was the world's fourth-largest producer and largest exporter of automobiles. German automotive companies enjoy an extremely strong position in the so-called premium segment, with a combined world market share of about 90%.

Small- to medium-sized manufacturing firms (Mittelstand companies) which specialise in technologically advanced niche products and are often family-owned form a major part of the German economy.[107] It is estimated that about 1,500 German companies occupy a top three position in their respective market segment worldwide. In about two thirds of all industry sectors German companies belong to the top three competitors.[108]

Germany is the only country among the top five arms exporters that is not a permanent member of the United Nations Security Council.[109]

Services edit

 
 
Bavaria (l.) is a tourism destination while Berlin (r.) is a centre of creative industries, research, and education.

In 2017 services constituted 68.6% of gross domestic product (GDP), and the sector employed 74.3% of the workforce.[65] The subcomponents of services are financial, renting, and business activities (30.5%); trade, hotels and restaurants, and transport (18%); and other service activities (21.7%).

Germany is the seventh most visited country in the world,[110][111] with a total of 407 million overnights during 2012.[112] This number includes 68.83 million nights by foreign visitors. In 2012, over 30.4 million international tourists arrived in Germany. Berlin has become the third most visited city destination in Europe.[113] Additionally, more than 30% of Germans spend their holiday in their own country, with the biggest share going to Mecklenburg-Vorpommern. Domestic and international travel and tourism combined directly contribute over EUR43.2 billion to German GDP. Including indirect and induced impacts, the industry contributes 4.5% of German GDP and supports 2 million jobs (4.8% of total employment).[114] The largest annual international trade fairs and congresses are held in several German cities such as Hannover, Frankfurt, and Berlin.[115]

Government finances edit

 
German bonds
Inverted yield curve in 2008 and Negative interest rates 2014-2022
  30 year
  10 year
  2 year
  1 year
  3 month

The debt-to-GDP ratio of Germany had its peak in 2010 when it stood at 80.3% and decreased since then.[116] According to Eurostat, the government gross debt of Germany amounts to €2,152.0 billion or 71.9% of its GDP in 2015.[117] The federal government achieved a budget surplus of €12.1 billion ($13.1 billion) in 2015.[118] Germany's credit rating by credit rating agencies Standard & Poor's, Moody's, and Fitch Ratings stands at the highest possible rating AAA with a stable outlook in 2016.[119]

Germany's "debt clock" (Schuldenuhr) reversed for the first time in 20 years in January 2018. It is now currently increasing at 10,424.00 per second (October 2020).[120]

Economists generally see Germany's current account surplus as undesirable.[121]

Infrastructure edit

Energy edit

Germany is the world's fifth-largest consumer of energy, and two-thirds of its primary energy was imported in 2002. In the same year, Germany was Europe's largest consumer of electricity, totaling 512.9 terawatt-hours. Government policy promotes energy conservation and the development of renewable energy sources, such as solar, wind, biomass, hydroelectric, and geothermal energy. As a result of energy-saving measures, energy efficiency has been improving since the beginning of the 1970s. The government has set the goal of meeting half the country's energy demands from renewable sources by 2050. Renewable energy also plays an increasing role in the labour market: Almost 700,000 people are employed in the energy sector. About 50 per cent of them work with renewable energies.[122]

 
The largest solar power and third-largest wind power capacity in the world is installed in Germany.

In 2000, the red-green coalition under Chancellor Schröder and the German nuclear power industry agreed to phase out all nuclear power plants by 2021.[123] The conservative coalition under Chancellor Merkel reversed this decision in January 2010, electing to keep plants open. The nuclear disaster of the Japanese nuclear plant Fukushima in March 2011 however, changed the political climate fundamentally: Older nuclear plants have been shut down. Germany is seeking to have wind, solar, biogas, and other renewable energy sources play a bigger role, as the country looks to completely phase out nuclear power by 2022 and coal-fired power plants by 2038.[124] Renewable energy yet still plays a more modest role in energy consumption, though German solar and wind power industries play a leading role worldwide.

In 2009, Germany's total energy consumption (not just electricity) came from the following sources:[125] oil 34.6%, natural gas 21.7%, lignite 11.4%, bituminous coal 11.1%, nuclear power 11.0%, hydro and wind power 1.5%, others 9.0%.

In the first half of 2021, coal, natural gas, and nuclear energy comprised 56% of the total electricity fed into Germany's grid in the first half of 2021. Coal was the leader out of the conventional energy sources, comprising over 27% of Germany's electricity. Wind power's contribution to the electric grid was 22%.[124]

There are 3 major entry points for oil pipelines: in the northeast (the Druzhba pipeline, coming from Gdańsk), west (coming from Rotterdam) and southeast (coming from Nelahozeves). The oil pipelines of Germany do not constitute a proper network, and sometimes only connect two different locations. Major oil refineries are located in or near the following cities: Schwedt, Spergau, Vohburg, Burghausen, Karlsruhe, Cologne, Gelsenkirchen, Lingen, Wilhelmshaven, Hamburg, and Heide.[126]

Germany's network of natural gas pipelines, on the other hand, is dense and well-connected. Imported pipeline gas comes mostly from Russia, the Netherlands, and the United Kingdom. Although gas imports from Russia have been historically reliable, even during the Cold War, recent price disputes between Gazprom and former Soviet states, such as Ukraine, have also affected Germany. As a result, high political importance is placed on the construction of the Nord Stream 1 pipeline, running from Vyborg in Russia along the Baltic sea to Greifswald in Germany. This direct connection avoids third-party transit countries.[126] Germany imports 50% to 75% of its natural gas from Russia.[127]

Transport edit

 
The ICE 3 trainset in Frankfurt

With its central position in Europe, Germany is an important transportation hub. This is reflected in its dense and modern transportation networks. The extensive motorway (Autobahn) network ranks worldwide third largest in its total length and features a lack of blanket speed limits on the majority of routes.[128]

Germany has established a polycentric network of high-speed trains. The Intercity Express or ICE is the most advanced service category of the Deutsche Bahn and serves major German cities as well as destinations in neighbouring countries. The train maximum speed varies between 200 km/h and 320 km/h (125-200 mph). Connections are offered at either 30-minute, hourly, or two-hourly intervals.[129] German railways are heavily subsidised, receiving €17.0 billion in 2014.[130]

The largest German airports are Frankfurt Airport and Munich Airport, both are global hubs of Lufthansa. Other major airports are Berlin Brandenburg Airport, Düsseldorf, Hamburg, Hanover, Cologne/Bonn, and Stuttgart.

Banking system edit

7 German banks are among the biggest in the world. As of 2019, Germany is the country in Europe with the highest number of credit institutions: between 1,600 and 1,800.[131] The types of institutions are in strong competition with each other: 390 Sparkassen and 8 public Landesbanken groups (1,200 billion euros of deposits), private commercial banks (DB, Commerzbank, and Unicredit-HypoVereinsbank, for 780 billion), cooperative credit banks (700 billion euros), savings banks, and Raiffeisen. The total of the system is worth 3,800 billion. 75% of retail customer deposits are managed by savings banks and cooperative credit banks.

According to Eurostat, in 2022 Germany also recorded the highest European rate of gross savings (19.98% of disposable income).[132]

Technology edit

 
Liquid crystal as visualised by a polarizing microscope. Germany is a pioneer research centre for nanotechnology and materials engineering.[133]

Germany's achievements in sciences have been significant, and research and development efforts form an integral part of the economy.[134]

Germany is also one of the leading countries in developing and using green technologies. Companies specialising in green technology have an estimated turnover of €200 billion. German expertise in engineering, science, and research is eminently respectable.

The lead markets of Germany's green technology industry are power generation, sustainable mobility, material efficiency, energy efficiency, waste management and recycling, sustainable water management.[135]

Regarding triadic patents, Germany is in third place after the U.S. and Japan. With more than 26,500 registrations for patents submitted to the European Patent Office, Germany is the leading European nation. Siemens, Bosch, and BASF, with almost 5,000 registrations for patents between them in 2008, are among the top 5 of more than 35,000 companies registering patents. Together with the U.S. and Japan, about patents for nano, bio, and new technologies Germany is one of the world's most active nations. With around one-third of triadic patents, Germany leads the way worldwide in the field of vehicle emission reduction.[136]

According to Winfried Kretschmann, who is premier of the region where Daimler is based, "China dominates the production of solar cells. Tesla is ahead in electric cars and Germany has lost the first round of digitalization to Google, Apple, and the like. Whether Germany has a future as an industrial economy will depend on whether we can manage the ecological and digital transformation of our economy".[137]

Challenges edit

Despite economic prosperity, Germany's biggest threat to future economic development is the nation's declining birthrate which is among the lowest in the world. This is particularly prevalent in parts of society with higher education. As a result, the numbers of workers are expected to decrease and the government spending needed to support pensioners and healthcare will increase if the trend is not reversed.[138]

Less than a quarter of German people expect living conditions to improve in the coming decades.[139]

On August 25, 2020, Federal Statistical Office of Germany revealed that the German economy plunged by 9.7% in the second quarter which is the worst on record. The latest figures show how hard the German economy was hit by the government measures in response to the COVID-19 pandemic.[140]

Energy-intensive German industry and German exporters were hit particularly hard by the 2022 global energy crisis.[141][142] Economy Minister Robert Habeck warned that the planned end of Russian energy imports will permanently raise energy prices for German industry and consumers.[143]

Poverty edit

During the last decades, the number of people living in poverty in Germany has been increasing. Children are more likely to be poor than adults. There has been a strong increase in the number of poor children. In 1965, only one in 75 children lived on welfare, in 2007 one in 6 did.[144]

Poverty rates differ by states. While in 2005 in states like Bavaria, only 6.6% of children and 3.9% of all citizens were impoverished, in Berlin, 15.2% of the inhabitants and 30.7% of the children received welfare payments.[145]

The German Kinderhilfswerk, an organization caring for children in need has demanded the government to do something about the poverty problem.

As of 2015, poverty in Germany was at its highest since the German reunification (1990). Some 12.5 million Germans are now classified as poor.[146]

Homelessness edit

Homelessness in Germany is a significant social issue, one that is estimated to affect around 678,000 people.[147] This figure includes about 372,000 people that are accommodated (in refugee shelters, etc.) by public services, e.g. by the municipalities.[148] Since 2014, there has been a 150% increase in the homeless population within the country.[149] Reportedly, around 22,000 of the homeless population are children.[147][citation needed]

In addition, the country has yet to publish statistics on homelessness at a Federal Level[150] despite it being an ongoing and widespread matter.

Climate change edit

As a highly industrial, urbanized economy with a relatively short coastline compared to other major economies, the impacts of climate change on Germany are more narrowly focused than other major economies. Germany's traditional industrial regions are typically the most vulnerable to climate change. These are mostly located in the provinces of North Rhine-Westphalia, Saarland, Rhineland-Palatinate, Thuringia, Saxony, Schleswig-Holstein and the free cities of Bremen and Hamburg.[151]

The Rhineland is historically a heavily industrial and population-dense area which includes the states of North Rhine-Westphalia, Rhineland Palatinate, and Saarland. This region is rich in iron and coal deposits and supports one of Europe's largest coal industries. In the past, sulfuric acid emissions from Rhineland coal plants contributed to acid rain, damaging forests in other regions like Hesse, Thuringia, and Saxony.

Other significant problems for the Rhineland related to its high level of industrialization include the destruction of infrastructure from extreme weather events, loss of water for industrial purposes, and fluctuation of the ground water level. Since these problems are related to its level of industrialization, cities within other regions are also sensitive to these challenges including Munich and Bremen.

See also edit

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economy, germany, economy, germany, highly, developed, social, market, economy, largest, national, economy, europe, third, largest, nominal, world, fifth, volatile, currency, exchange, rate, germany, measured, dollars, fluctuates, sharply, 2017, country, accou. The economy of Germany is a highly developed social market economy 21 It has the largest national economy in Europe the third largest by nominal GDP in the world and fifth by GDP PPP Due to a volatile currency exchange rate Germany s GDP as measured in dollars fluctuates sharply In 2017 the country accounted for 28 of the euro area economy according to the International Monetary Fund IMF 22 Germany is a founding member of the European Union and the Eurozone 23 24 Economy of GermanyFrankfurt the financial capital of GermanyCurrencyEuro EUR Fiscal yearCalendar yearTrade organisationsEU WTO G 20 G7 and OECDCountry groupDeveloped Advanced 1 High income economy 2 Largest European economy 3 StatisticsPopulation84 270 625 2022 4 GDP 4 4 trillion nominal 2023 5 5 5 trillion PPP 2023 5 GDP rank3rd nominal 2023 5th PPP 2023 GDP growth1 8 2022 0 5 2023 0 9 2024 5 GDP per capita 52 800 nominal 2023 5 66 000 PPP 2023 5 GDP per capita rank20th nominal 2023 18th PPP 2023 GDP by sectoragriculture 0 7 industry 30 7 services 68 6 2017 3 GDP by componentHousehold consumption 53 1 Government consumption 19 5 Investment in fixed capital 20 4 Investment in inventories 0 5 Exports of goods and services 47 3 Imports of goods and services 38 7 2017 3 Inflation CPI 8 7 2022 6 3 2023 3 5 2024 5 Population below poverty line13 at risk of poverty or social exclusion AROPE 2019 6 Gini coefficient29 7 low 2019 7 Human Development Index0 942 very high 2021 8 9th 0 883 very high IHDI 8th 2021 9 Labour force50 million 2023 10 68 3 employment rate August 2020 10 Labour force by occupationagriculture 1 4 industry 24 2 services 74 3 2016 3 Unemployment5 4 2022 10 5 8 youth unemployment August 2020 10 2 0 million unemployed August 2020 10 Average gross salary 4 323 monthlyAverage net salary 2 781 monthlyMain industriesIronsteelcoalcementchemicalsmachineryvehiclesmachine toolselectronicsautomobilesfood and beveragesshipbuildingtextilesExternalExports 1 62 trillion 2022 11 3 Export goodsmotor vehicles machinery chemicals computer and electronic products electrical equipment pharmaceuticals metals transport equipment foodstuffs textiles rubber and plastic productsMain export partners European Union 53 6 France 7 5 Netherlands 6 4 Italy 5 6 Poland 5 3 Austria 5 2 Belgium 3 7 United States 8 6 China 7 7 United Kingdom 4 8 Switzerland 4 4 2021 11 3 Imports 1 17 trillion 2022 12 3 Import goodsmachinery data processing equipment vehicles chemicals oil and gas metals electric equipment pharmaceuticals foodstuffs agricultural productsMain import partners European Union 58 6 Netherlands 9 6 Poland 6 6 Italy 5 8 France 5 5 Czechia 5 2 Belgium 4 6 China 10 United States 4 8 Switzerland 4 1 United Kingdom 2 9 2021 12 3 FDI stock 1 653 trillion 2017 3 Abroad 2 298 trillion 2017 3 Current account 280 billion 2019 3 Gross external debt 5 4 trillion 2022 13 Public financesGovernment debt59 8 of GDP 2019 14 2 053 trillion 2019 14 Budget balance 49 8 billion surplus 2019 14 1 4 of GDP 2019 14 Revenues50 of GDP 2023 14 Expenses45 4 of GDP 2019 14 Economic aid 26 billion from European Structural and Investment Funds 2007 2013 15 27 87 billion from European Structural and Investment Funds 2014 2020 16 Credit ratingStandard amp Poor s 17 18 AAA Outlook Stable Moody s 18 Aaa Outlook Stable Fitch 18 AAA Outlook Stable Scope 19 AAA Outlook StableForeign reserves 400 billion 2022 20 All values unless otherwise stated are in US dollars In 2016 Germany recorded the highest trade surplus in the world worth 310 billion 25 This economic result made it the biggest capital exporter globally 26 Germany is one of the largest exporters globally with 1 81 trillion worth of goods and services exported in 2019 27 28 The service sector contributes around 70 of the total GDP industry 29 1 and agriculture 0 9 Exports accounted for 50 3 of national output 29 30 The top 10 exports of Germany are vehicles machinery chemical goods electronic products electrical equipment pharmaceuticals transport equipment basic metals food products and rubber and plastics 31 The economy of Germany is the largest manufacturing economy in Europe and it is less likely to be affected by a financial downturn 32 Germany conducts applied research with practical industrial value and sees itself as a bridge between the latest university insights and industry specific product and process improvements It generates a great deal of knowledge in its own laboratories 33 Germany is rich in timber lignite potash and salt Some minor sources of natural gas are being exploited in the state of Lower Saxony Until German reunification the German Democratic Republic mined for uranium in the Ore Mountains see also SAG SDAG Wismut Energy in Germany is sourced predominantly by fossil fuels 30 with wind power in second place then nuclear power gas solar biomass wood and biofuels and hydro 34 Germany is the first major industrialised nation to commit to the renewable energy transition called Energiewende Germany is the leading producer of wind turbines in the world 35 Renewables produced 46 of electricity consumed in Germany as of 2019 36 99 per cent of all German companies belong to the German Mittelstand small and medium sized enterprises which are mostly family owned Of the world s 2000 largest publicly listed companies measured by revenue the Fortune Global 2000 53 are headquartered in Germany with the top 10 being the following Allianz one of the world s largest insurance companies and one of the largest financial services groups largest in Europe Munich Re also one of the largest insurance companies Daimler Volkswagen and BMW among the biggest car markers in the world 37 Siemens the world s biggest industrial machinery company Deutsche Telekom one of the world s largest telecommunication companies Bayer among the biggest biomedical companies BASF the world s 2nd biggest chemical producer and SAP Europe s biggest software company 38 Germany is the world s top location for trade fairs 39 Around two thirds of the world s leading trade fairs take place in Germany 40 The largest annual international trade fairs and congresses are held in several German cities such as Hanover Frankfurt Cologne Leipzig and Dusseldorf Contents 1 History 1 1 Age of Industrialisation 1 2 Weimar Republic and Third Reich 1 3 West Germany 1 4 East Germany 1 5 Federal Republic 2 Data 2 1 Companies 2 2 Mergers and acquisitions 3 Economic region 3 1 German states 3 2 Wealth 4 Sectors 4 1 Primary 4 2 Industry 4 3 Services 5 Government finances 6 Infrastructure 6 1 Energy 6 2 Transport 6 3 Banking system 7 Technology 8 Challenges 8 1 Poverty 8 2 Homelessness 8 3 Climate change 9 See also 10 References 11 Notes 12 Further reading 13 External linksHistory editMain article Economic history of Germany nbsp Real GDP per capita development in Germany since 1820Age of Industrialisation edit Main article Industrialization in Germany The Industrial Revolution in Germany got underway approximately a century later than in the United Kingdom France and Belgium partly because Germany only became a unified country in 1871 41 nbsp Train factory of August Borsig in 1847 nbsp Many companies such as steam machine producer J Kemna modeled themselves on English industry nbsp The invention of the automobile Bertha Benz and Karl Benz in a Benz Viktoria model 1894 nbsp The invention of the cruise ship Albert Ballin s SS Auguste Viktoria in 1890 nbsp Railway construction as an expression of the Industrial Revolution here the Bonn Colner railway around 1844 The establishment of the Deutscher Zollverein German Customs Union in 1834 and the expansion of railway systems were the main drivers of Germany s industrial development and political union From 1834 tariff barriers between increasing numbers of the Kleindeutschland German states were eliminated citation needed In 1835 the first German railway linked the Franconian cities of Nuremberg and Furth it proved so successful that the decade of the 1840s saw railway mania in all the German states Between 1845 and 1870 8 000 kilometres 5 000 mi of rail had been built and in 1850 Germany was building its own locomotives Over time other German states joined the customs union and started linking their railroads which began to connect the corners of Germany The growth of free trade and a rail system across Germany intensified economic development which opened up new markets for local products created a pool of middle managers clarification needed increased the demand for engineers architects and skilled machinists and stimulated investments in coal and iron 42 Another factor that propelled German industry forward was the unification of the monetary system made possible in part by political unification The Deutsche Mark a new monetary coinage system backed by gold was introduced in 1871 However this system did not fully come into use as silver coins retained their value until 1907 citation needed The victory of Prussia and her allies over Napoleon III of France in the Franco Prussian War of 1870 1871 marked the end of French hegemony in Europe and resulted in the proclamation of the German Empire in 1871 The establishment of the empire inherently presented Europe with the reality of a new populous and industrialising polity possessing a considerable and undeniably increasing economic and diplomatic presence The influence of French economic principles produced important institutional reforms in Germany including the abolition of feudal restrictions on the sale of large landed estates the reduction of the power of the guilds in the cities and the introduction of a new more efficient commercial law Nonetheless political decisions about the economy of the empire were still largely controlled by a coalition of rye and iron that is the Prussian Junker landowners of the east and the Ruhr heavy industry of the west 43 Regarding politics and society between 1881 and 1889 Chancellor Otto von Bismarck promoted laws that provided social insurance and improved working conditions He instituted the world s first welfare state Germany was the first to introduce social insurance programmes including universal healthcare compulsory education sickness insurance accident insurance disability insurance and a retirement pension Moreover the government s universal education policy bore fruit with Germany achieving when the highest literacy rate in the world 99 education levels that provided the nation with more people good at handling numbers more engineers chemists opticians skilled workers for its factories skilled managers knowledgeable farmers and skilled military personnel 44 By 1900 Germany surpassed Britain in steel production and became the largest producer behind only the United States The German economic miracle was also intensified by unprecedented population growth from 35 million in 1850 to 67 million in 1913 From 1895 to 1907 the number of workers engaged in machine building doubled from half a million to well over a million Only 40 per cent of Germans lived in rural areas by 1910 a drop from 67 at the birth of the Empire Industry accounted for 60 per cent of the gross national product in 1913 45 The German chemical industry became the most advanced in the world and by 1914 the country was producing half the world s electrical equipment The rapid advance to industrial maturity led to a drastic shift in Germany s economic situation from a rural economy into a major exporter of finished goods The ratio of the finished product to total exports jumped from 38 in 1872 to 63 in 1912 By 1913 Germany had come to dominate all the European markets By 1914 Germany had become one of the biggest exporters in the world 46 Weimar Republic and Third Reich edit Main article Economy of Nazi Germany nbsp Gross national product and GNP deflator year on year change in 1926 to 1939 in Germany Via google to Pdf file of German publication nbsp Occupation by administrative district in the 1925 censusThe Nazis rose to power while unemployment was very high 47 but achieved full employment later thanks to massive public works programmes such as the Reichsbahn Reichspost and the Reichsautobahn projects 48 In 1935 rearmament in contravention of the Treaty of Versailles added to the economy 47 49 The post 1931 financial crisis economic policies of expansionary fiscal policies as Germany was off the gold standard was advised by their non Nazi Minister of Economics Hjalmar Schacht 47 who in 1933 became the president of the central bank Schacht later resigned from the post in 1938 and was replaced by Hermann Goring The trading policies of the Third Reich aimed at self sufficiency but with a lack of raw materials Germany would have to maintain trade links but on bilateral preferences foreign exchange controls import quotas and export subsidies under what was called the New Plan Neuer Plan of 19 September 1934 50 The New Plan was based on trade with less developed countries who would trade raw materials for German industrial goods saving currency 51 Southern Europe was preferable to Western Europe and North America as there could be no trade blockades 52 This policy became known as the Grosswirtschaftsraum greater economic area policy Eventually the Nazi party developed strong relationships with big business 53 and abolished trade unions in 1933 in order to form the Reich Labour Service RAD German Labour Front DAF to set working hours Beauty of Labour SDA which set working conditions and Strength through Joy KDF to ensure sports clubs for workers 54 West Germany edit See also Wirtschaftswunder nbsp The Volkswagen Beetle was an icon of West German reconstruction Beginning with the replacement of the Reichsmark with the Deutsche Mark as legal tender a lasting period of low inflation and rapid industrial growth was overseen by the government led by German Chancellor Konrad Adenauer and his minister of economics Ludwig Erhard raising West Germany from total wartime devastation to one of the most developed nations in modern Europe In 1953 it was decided that Germany was to repay 1 1 billion of the aid it had received The last repayment was made in June 1971 Apart from these factors hard work and long hours at full capacity among the population in the 1950s 1960s and early 1970s and extra labour supplied by thousands of Gastarbeiter guest workers provided a vital base for the economic upturn East Germany edit Main article Economy of the German Democratic Republic By the early 1950s the Soviet Union had seized reparations in the form of agricultural and industrial products and demanded further heavy reparation payments 55 Silesia with the Upper Silesian Coal Basin and Stettin a prominent natural port were lost to Poland Exports from West Germany exceeded 323 billion in 1988 In the same year East Germany exported 30 7 billion worth of goods 65 to other communist states 56 East Germany had zero unemployment 56 Federal Republic edit nbsp As of 2013 update Germany is the third largest exporter and third largest importer in the world producing the largest trade surplus as a national economy The German economy practically stagnated in the beginning of the 2000s The worst growth figures were achieved in 2002 1 4 in 2003 1 0 and in 2005 1 4 57 Unemployment was also chronically high 58 Due to these problems together with Germany s aging population the welfare system came under considerable strain This led the government to push through a wide ranging programme of belt tightening reforms Agenda 2010 including the labour market reforms known as Hartz I IV 58 In the later part of the first decade of 2000 the world economy experienced high growth from which Germany as a leading exporter also profited Some credit the Hartz reforms with achieving high growth and declining unemployment but others contend that they resulted in a massive decrease in standards of living and that its effects are limited and temporary 58 The nominal GDP of Germany contracted in the second and third quarters of 2008 putting the country in a technical recession following a global and European recession cycle 59 German industrial output dropped to 3 6 in September vis a vis August 60 61 In January 2009 the German government under Angela Merkel approved a 50 billion 70 billion economic stimulus plan to protect several sectors from a downturn and a subsequent rise in unemployment rates 62 Germany exited the recession in the second and third quarters of 2009 mostly due to rebounding manufacturing orders and exports primarily from outside the Eurozone and relatively steady consumer demand 58 Germany is a founding member of the EU the G8 and the G20 and was the world s largest exporter from 2003 to 2008 In 2011 it remained the third largest exporter 63 and third largest importer 64 Most of the country s exports are in engineering especially machinery automobiles chemical goods and metals 65 Germany is a leading producer of wind turbines and solar power technology 66 Annual trade fairs and congresses are held in cities throughout Germany 67 2011 was a record breaking year for the German economy German companies exported goods worth over 1 trillion 1 3 trillion the highest figure in history The number of people in work has risen to 41 6 million the highest recorded figure 68 Through 2012 Germany s economy continued to be stronger relative to local neighbouring nations 69 In 2023 Germany experienced economic difficulties as a result of the closure of Russian natural gas resources due to Western sanctions following the Russian invasion of Ukraine 70 Germany imported 55 of its gas from Russia at the time when Russia started the invasion in 2022 71 Amid a global energy crisis Chancellor Olaf Scholz committed to weaken dependence on Russian energy imports by halting certification of Nord Stream 2 while also committing to his long term predecessor Angela Merkel s policy of phasing out nuclear energy 72 73 74 As of December 2023 Germany is the third largest economy in nominal terms in the world after the United States and China and the largest economy in Europe It is the third largest export nation in the world 75 Data editThe following table shows the main economic indicators in 1980 2021 with IMF staff estimates in 2022 2027 Inflation below 5 is in green 76 Year GDP in Bil US PPP GDP per capita in US PPP GDP in Bil US nominal GDP per capita in US nominal GDP growth real Inflation rate in Per cent Unemployment in Per cent Government debt in of GDP 1980 855 3 11 130 4 853 7 11 109 7 nbsp 1 3 nbsp 5 4 3 4 n a1981 nbsp 937 2 nbsp 12 174 0 nbsp 718 3 nbsp 9 329 6 nbsp 0 1 nbsp 6 3 nbsp 4 8 n a1982 nbsp 987 3 nbsp 12 833 5 nbsp 693 5 nbsp 9 015 0 nbsp 0 8 nbsp 5 3 nbsp 6 7 n a1983 nbsp 1 041 9 nbsp 13 590 8 nbsp 691 9 nbsp 9 025 2 nbsp 1 6 nbsp 3 3 nbsp 8 1 n a1984 nbsp 1 110 0 nbsp 14 537 9 nbsp 651 9 nbsp 8 537 8 nbsp 2 8 nbsp 2 4 nbsp 8 1 n a1985 nbsp 1 170 2 nbsp 15 364 3 nbsp 661 0 nbsp 8 678 9 nbsp 2 2 nbsp 2 1 nbsp 8 1 n a1986 nbsp 1 222 7 nbsp 16 041 5 nbsp 944 1 nbsp 12 387 0 nbsp 2 4 nbsp 0 1 nbsp 7 8 n a1987 nbsp 1 271 3 nbsp 16 676 8 nbsp 1 174 9 nbsp 15 411 5 nbsp 1 5 nbsp 0 2 nbsp 7 8 n a1988 nbsp 1 365 3 nbsp 17 801 4 nbsp 1 266 6 nbsp 16 514 7 nbsp 3 7 nbsp 1 3 nbsp 7 7 n a1989 nbsp 1 474 4 nbsp 19 033 2 nbsp 1 257 4 nbsp 16 232 1 nbsp 3 9 nbsp 2 8 nbsp 6 8 n a1990 nbsp 1 617 1 nbsp 20 482 9 nbsp 1 598 6 nbsp 20 249 1 nbsp 5 7 nbsp 2 7 nbsp 6 2 n a1991 nbsp 1 755 6 nbsp 21 951 9 nbsp 1 875 6 nbsp 23 453 1 nbsp 5 0 nbsp 3 5 nbsp 5 5 39 0 1992 nbsp 1 830 0 nbsp 22 733 4 nbsp 2 136 3 nbsp 26 538 0 nbsp 1 9 nbsp 5 0 nbsp 6 6 nbsp 41 5 1993 nbsp 1 855 1 nbsp 22 917 9 nbsp 2 072 5 nbsp 25 603 0 nbsp 1 0 nbsp 4 5 nbsp 7 8 nbsp 45 1 1994 nbsp 1 940 2 nbsp 23 909 4 nbsp 2 209 9 nbsp 27 233 5 nbsp 2 4 nbsp 2 7 nbsp 8 4 nbsp 47 5 1995 nbsp 2 011 4 nbsp 24 738 0 nbsp 2 588 0 nbsp 31 829 6 nbsp 1 5 nbsp 1 7 nbsp 8 2 nbsp 54 9 1996 nbsp 2 064 9 nbsp 25 347 0 nbsp 2 498 1 nbsp 30 664 3 nbsp 0 8 nbsp 1 3 nbsp 8 9 nbsp 57 8 1997 nbsp 2 138 0 nbsp 26 230 3 nbsp 2 214 7 nbsp 27 170 7 nbsp 1 8 nbsp 1 5 nbsp 9 7 nbsp 58 9 1998 nbsp 2 205 8 nbsp 27 082 8 nbsp 2 242 1 nbsp 27 528 2 nbsp 2 0 nbsp 0 6 nbsp 9 4 nbsp 59 5 1999 nbsp 2 279 1 nbsp 27 990 7 nbsp 2 197 1 nbsp 26 984 2 nbsp 1 9 nbsp 0 6 nbsp 8 6 nbsp 60 4 2000 nbsp 2 398 4 nbsp 29 443 7 nbsp 1 948 8 nbsp 23 924 9 nbsp 2 9 nbsp 1 4 nbsp 8 0 nbsp 59 3 2001 nbsp 2 493 8 nbsp 30 592 1 nbsp 1 945 8 nbsp 23 869 8 nbsp 1 7 nbsp 1 9 nbsp 7 8 nbsp 58 2 2002 nbsp 2 527 6 nbsp 30 983 3 nbsp 2 077 0 nbsp 25 460 3 nbsp 0 2 nbsp 1 3 nbsp 8 6 nbsp 59 9 2003 nbsp 2 559 3 nbsp 31 384 1 nbsp 2 501 0 nbsp 30 668 8 nbsp 0 7 nbsp 1 1 nbsp 9 7 nbsp 63 5 2004 nbsp 2 659 2 nbsp 32 645 2 nbsp 2 813 1 nbsp 34 534 8 nbsp 1 2 nbsp 1 8 nbsp 10 3 nbsp 65 2 2005 nbsp 2 762 5 nbsp 33 963 1 nbsp 2 848 4 nbsp 35 020 2 nbsp 0 7 nbsp 1 9 nbsp 11 0 nbsp 67 5 2006 nbsp 2 956 3 nbsp 36 419 4 nbsp 2 994 9 nbsp 36 894 5 nbsp 3 8 nbsp 1 8 nbsp 10 0 nbsp 66 9 2007 nbsp 3 126 7 nbsp 38 605 1 nbsp 3 426 0 nbsp 42 299 9 nbsp 3 0 nbsp 2 3 nbsp 8 5 nbsp 64 2 2008 nbsp 3 217 3 nbsp 39 835 3 nbsp 3 744 9 nbsp 46 367 9 nbsp 1 0 nbsp 2 8 nbsp 7 4 nbsp 65 7 2009 nbsp 3 053 5 nbsp 37 939 0 nbsp 3 407 6 nbsp 42 338 7 nbsp 5 7 nbsp 0 2 nbsp 7 2 nbsp 73 2 2010 nbsp 3 219 5 nbsp 40 100 8 nbsp 3 402 4 nbsp 42 379 7 nbsp 4 2 nbsp 1 1 nbsp 6 6 nbsp 82 0 2011 nbsp 3 415 0 nbsp 42 541 2 nbsp 3 748 7 nbsp 46 697 4 nbsp 3 9 nbsp 2 5 nbsp 5 5 nbsp 79 4 2012 nbsp 3 487 2 nbsp 43 359 4 nbsp 3 529 4 nbsp 43 883 4 nbsp 0 4 nbsp 2 2 nbsp 5 1 nbsp 80 7 2013 nbsp 3 628 6 nbsp 44 993 7 nbsp 3 733 9 nbsp 46 299 4 nbsp 0 4 nbsp 1 6 nbsp 5 0 nbsp 78 3 2014 nbsp 3 807 1 nbsp 47 011 1 nbsp 3 890 1 nbsp 48 035 8 nbsp 2 2 nbsp 0 8 nbsp 4 7 nbsp 75 3 2015 nbsp 3 890 1 nbsp 47 622 3 nbsp 3 357 9 nbsp 41 107 2 nbsp 1 5 nbsp 0 7 nbsp 4 4 nbsp 71 9 2016 nbsp 4 164 7 nbsp 50 574 2 nbsp 3 468 9 nbsp 42 124 2 nbsp 2 2 nbsp 0 4 nbsp 3 9 nbsp 69 0 2017 nbsp 4 411 7 nbsp 53 373 9 nbsp 3 689 5 nbsp 44 636 8 nbsp 2 7 nbsp 1 7 nbsp 3 6 nbsp 64 6 2018 nbsp 4 561 6 nbsp 55 021 0 nbsp 3 976 2 nbsp 47 961 0 nbsp 1 0 nbsp 1 9 nbsp 3 2 nbsp 61 3 2019 nbsp 4 692 1 nbsp 56 468 0 nbsp 3 888 7 nbsp 46 798 8 nbsp 1 1 nbsp 1 4 nbsp 3 0 nbsp 58 9 2020 nbsp 4 573 3 nbsp 54 993 4 nbsp 3 886 6 nbsp 46 735 3 nbsp 3 7 nbsp 0 4 nbsp 3 6 nbsp 68 0 2021 nbsp 4 888 4 nbsp 58 757 2 nbsp 4 262 8 nbsp 51 237 6 nbsp 2 6 nbsp 3 2 nbsp 3 6 nbsp 69 6 2022 nbsp 5 316 9 nbsp 63 834 9 nbsp 4 031 1 nbsp 48 397 8 nbsp 1 5 nbsp 8 5 nbsp 2 9 nbsp 71 1 2023 nbsp 5 490 2 nbsp 65 865 3 nbsp 4 120 2 nbsp 49 430 1 nbsp 0 3 nbsp 7 2 nbsp 3 4 nbsp 68 3 2024 nbsp 5 689 6 nbsp 68 235 1 nbsp 4 337 4 nbsp 52 017 6 nbsp 1 5 nbsp 3 5 nbsp 3 3 nbsp 65 6 2025 nbsp 5 920 6 nbsp 71 011 2 nbsp 4 546 5 nbsp 54 530 9 nbsp 2 2 nbsp 2 6 nbsp 3 2 nbsp 63 1 2026 nbsp 6 143 0 nbsp 73 716 8 nbsp 4 740 7 nbsp 56 889 6 nbsp 1 8 nbsp 2 0 nbsp 3 0 nbsp 61 0 2027 nbsp 6 346 0 nbsp 76 204 6 nbsp 4 925 0 nbsp 59 140 7 nbsp 1 3 nbsp 2 0 nbsp 3 0 nbsp 59 7 Companies edit See also List of companies of Germany and List of largest German companies Of the world s 500 largest stock market listed companies measured by revenue in 2010 the Fortune Global 500 37 are headquartered in Germany 40 Germany based companies are included in the DAX the most popular German stock market index Well known global brands are Mercedes Benz BMW SAP Siemens Volkswagen Adidas Audi Allianz Porsche Bayer BASF Bosch and Nivea 77 Germany is recognised for its specialised small and medium enterprises known as the Mittelstand model SMEs account for more than 99 per cent of German companies 78 Around 1 000 of these companies are global market leaders in their segment and are labelled hidden champions 79 From 1991 to 2010 40 301 mergers and acquisitions with an involvement of German firms with a total known value of 2 422 bil EUR have been announced 80 The largest transactions 81 since 1991 are the acquisition of Mannesmann by Vodafone for 204 8 bil EUR in 1999 the merger of Daimler Benz with Chrysler to form DaimlerChrysler in 1998 valued at 36 3 bil EUR Berlin developed an international startup ecosystem and became a leading location for venture capital funded firms in the European Union 82 The sector with the highest number of companies registered in Germany is Services with 1 443 708 companies followed by Finance Insurance and Real Estate and Construction with 480 593 and 173 167 companies respectively 83 nbsp Volkswagen headquarters in WolfsburgThe list includes the largest German companies by revenue in 2011 Rank 84 Name Headquarters Ticker Revenue Mil Profit Mil Employees World 0 1 Volkswagen Group Wolfsburg VOWG 159 000 15 800 502 0000 2 E ON Essen EONGn 113 000 1 900 79 0000 3 Daimler Stuttgart DAIGn 107 000 6 000 271 0000 4 Siemens Berlin Munchen SIEGn 74 000 6 300 360 0000 5 BASF Ludwigshafen am Rhein BASFn 73 000 6 600 111 0000 6 BMW Munchen BMWG 69 000 4 900 100 0000 7 Metro Dusseldorf MEOG 67 000 740 288 0000 8 Schwarz Gruppe Neckarsulm 63 000 N A 315 0000 9 Deutsche Telekom Bonn DTEGn 59 000 670 235 0000 10 Deutsche Post Bonn DPWGn 53 000 1 300 471 000 Bosch Gerlingen 73 100 2 300 390 000 Uniper Dusseldorf UNSE01 67 300 13 000 Allianz Munchen ALVG 104 000 2 800 141 000 Deutsche Bank Frankfurt am Main DBKGn 4 300 101 000Mergers and acquisitions edit Since German reunification there have been 52 258 mergers or acquisitions deals inbound or outbound in Germany The most active year in terms of value was 1999 with a cumulated value of 48 bil EUR twice as much as the runner up which was 2006 with 24 bil EUR see graphic M amp A in Germany Here is a list of the top 10 deals ranked by value that include a German company The Vodafone Mannesmann deal is still the biggest deal in global history 85 Rank Date Acquirer Acquirer Nation Target Target Nation Value in bil USD 1 14 Nov 1999 Vodafone AirTouch PLC United Kingdom Mannesmann AG Germany 202 792 18 May 2016 Bayer AG Germany Monsanto Co United States 56 603 6 May 1998 Daimler Benz AG Germany Chrysler Corp United States 40 474 16 Aug 2016 Linde AG Germany Praxair Inc United States 35 165 21 Oct 1999 Mannesmann AG Germany Orange PLC United Kingdom 32 596 24 Jul 2000 Deutsche Telekom AG Germany VoiceStream Wireless Corp United States 29 407 17 May 1999 Rhone Poulenc SA France Hoechst AG Germany 21 928 23 Mar 2006 Bayer AG Germany Schering AG Germany 21 409 01 Apr 2001 Allianz AG Germany Dresdner Bank AG Germany 19 6610 30 May 2005 Unicredito Italiano SpA Italy Bayerische Hypo und Vereins Germany 18 26Economic region editMain article Eurozone nbsp Germany is part of a monetary union the Eurozone dark blue and of the EU single market Germany as a federation is a polycentric country and does not have a single economic centre The stock exchange is located in Frankfurt am Main the largest Media company Bertelsmann SE amp Co KGaA is headquartered in Gutersloh the largest car manufacturers are in Wolfsburg Volkswagen Stuttgart Mercedes Benz and Porsche and Munich Audi and BMW 86 Germany is an advocate of closer European economic and political integration Its commercial policies are increasingly determined by agreements among European Union EU members and EU single market legislation Germany introduced the common European currency the euro on 1 January 1999 Its monetary policy is set by the European Central Bank in Frankfurt The southern states Bundeslander especially Bayern Baden Wurttemberg and Hessen are economically stronger than the northern states One of Germany s traditionally strongest and at the same time oldest economic regions is the Ruhr area in the west between Duisburg and Dortmund 27 of the country s 100 largest companies are located there In recent years however the area whose economy is based on natural resources and heavy industry has seen a substantial rise in unemployment 2010 8 7 86 The economy of Bayern and Baden Wurttemberg the states with the lowest number of unemployed people 2018 2 7 3 1 on the other hand is based on high value products Important sectors are automobiles electronics aerospace and biomedicine among others Baden Wurttemberg is an industrial centre especially for the automobile and machine building industry and the home of brands like Mercedes Benz Daimler Porsche and Bosch 86 With the reunification on 3 October 1990 Germany began the major task of reconciling the economic systems of the two former republics Interventionist economic planning ensured gradual development in eastern Germany up to the level of former West Germany but the standard of living and annual income remains significantly higher in western German states 87 The modernisation and integration of the eastern German economy continues to be a long term process scheduled to last until the year 2019 with annual transfers from west to east amounting to roughly 80 billion The overall unemployment rate has consistently fallen since 2005 and reached a 20 year low in 2012 The country in July 2014 began legislating to introduce a federally mandated minimum wage which would come into effect on 1 January 2015 88 needs update On 25 May 2023 a declaration of a recession in the German economy was made It was reported that Gross Domestic Product GDP had contracted by 0 3 between January and March This contraction was largely due to increased prices which discouraged consumer spending The statistics office in Germany reported that household spending had dropped by 1 2 in the first quarter of the year 89 German states edit Main article List of German states by GRP List of German states by GRP in 2019 States Rank GRP in billions EUR Share of GDP nbsp Germany 3 435 760 100 nbsp North Rhine Westphalia 1 711 419 21 2 nbsp Bavaria 2 632 897 18 2 nbsp Baden Wurttemberg 3 524 325 15 1 nbsp Lower Saxony 4 307 036 8 8 nbsp Hesse 5 294 477 8 6 nbsp Berlin 6 153 291 4 3 nbsp Rhineland Palatinate 7 145 003 4 2 nbsp Saxony 8 128 097 3 8 nbsp Hamburg 9 123 270 3 6 nbsp Schleswig Holstein 10 97 962 2 9 nbsp Brandenburg 11 74 330 2 1 nbsp Thuringia 12 63 866 1 9 nbsp Saxony Anhalt 13 63 545 1 9 nbsp Mecklenburg Vorpommern 14 46 567 1 3 nbsp Saarland 15 36 253 1 1 nbsp Bremen 16 33 623 1 0Wealth edit Main article List of Germans by net worth nbsp Hasso PlattnerThe following top 10 list of German billionaires is based on an annual assessment of wealth and assets compiled and published by Forbes magazine on 1 March 2016 90 27 9 billion Albrecht family 20 3 billion Theo Albrecht Jr 18 5 billion Susanne Klatten 18 1 billion Georg Schaeffler 16 4 billion Dieter Schwarz 15 6 billion Stefan Quandt 15 4 billion Michael Otto 11 7 billion Heinz Hermann Thiele 10 billion Klaus Michael Kuhne 9 5 billion Hasso PlattnerWolfsburg is the city in Germany with the country s highest per capita GDP at 128 000 The following top 10 list of German cities with the highest per capita GDP is based on a study by the Cologne Institute for Economic Research on 31 July 2013 91 128 000 Wolfsburg Lower Saxony 114 281 Frankfurt am Main Hesse 108 347 Schweinfurt Bavaria 104 000 Ingolstadt Bavaria 99 389 Regensburg Bavaria 92 525 Dusseldorf North Rhine Westphalia 92 464 Ludwigshafen am Rhein Rhineland Palatinate 91 630 Erlangen Bavaria 91 121 Stuttgart Baden Wurttemberg 88 692 Ulm Baden WurttembergSectors edit nbsp German exports in 2006See also Category Industry in Germany Germany has a social market economy characterised by a highly qualified labour force a developed infrastructure a large capital stock a low level of corruption 92 and a high level of innovation 93 It has the largest national economy in Europe the third largest by nominal GDP in the world and ranked fifth by GDP PPP in 2023 5 The service sector contributes around 70 of the total GDP industry 29 1 and agriculture 0 9 94 Primary edit In 2010 agriculture forestry and mining accounted for only 0 9 of Germany s gross domestic product GDP and employed only 2 4 of the population 65 down from 4 in 1991 Agriculture is extremely productive and Germany can cover 90 of its nutritional needs with domestic production Germany is the third largest agricultural producer in the European Union after France and Italy Germany s principal agricultural products are potatoes wheat barley sugar beets fruit and cabbages 95 Despite the country s high level of industrialisation almost one third of its territory is covered by forest 96 The forestry industry provides for about two thirds of domestic consumption of wood and wood products so Germany is a net importer of these items nbsp Strip mining lignite at Tagebau Garzweiler near Grevenbroich GermanyThe German soil is relatively poor in raw materials Only lignite brown coal and potash salt Kalisalz are available in significant quantities However the former GDR s Wismut mining company produced a total of 230 400 tonnes of uranium between 1947 and 1990 and made East Germany the fourth largest producer of uranium ore worldwide largest in USSR s sphere of control at the time Oil natural gas and other resources are for the most part imported from other countries 97 Potash salt is mined in the centre of the country Niedersachsen Sachsen Anhalt and Thuringen The most important producer is K S formerly Kali und Salz AG 97 Germany s bituminous coal deposits were created more than 300 million years ago from swamps which extended from the present day South England over the Ruhr area to Poland Lignite deposits developed similarly but during a later period about 66 million years ago Because the wood is not yet completely transformed into coal brown coal contains less energy than bituminous coal 97 Lignite is extracted in the extreme western and eastern parts of the country mainly in Nordrhein Westfalen Sachsen and Brandenburg Considerable amounts are burned in coal plants near the mining areas to produce electricity Transporting lignite over far distances is not economically feasible therefore the plants are located practically next to the extraction sites Bituminous coal is mined in Nordrhein Westfalen and Saarland Most power plants burning bituminous coal operate on imported material therefore the plants are located not only near to the mining sites but throughout the country 97 In 2019 the country was the world s 3rd largest producer of selenium 98 the world s 5th largest producer of potash 99 the world s 5th largest producer of boron 100 the world s 7th largest producer of lime 101 the world s 13th largest producer of fluorspar 102 the world s 14th largest producer of feldspar 103 the world s 17th largest producer of graphite 104 the world s 18th largest producer of sulfur 105 in addition to being the 4th largest world producer of salt 106 Industry edit See also Mittelstand and Automotive industry in Germany nbsp The world s largest coherent chemistry plant BASF in LudwigshafenIndustry and construction accounted for 30 7 of the gross domestic product in 2017 and employed 24 2 of the workforce 3 Germany excels in the production of automobiles machinery electrical equipment and chemicals With the manufacture of 5 2 million vehicles in 2009 Germany was the world s fourth largest producer and largest exporter of automobiles German automotive companies enjoy an extremely strong position in the so called premium segment with a combined world market share of about 90 Small to medium sized manufacturing firms Mittelstand companies which specialise in technologically advanced niche products and are often family owned form a major part of the German economy 107 It is estimated that about 1 500 German companies occupy a top three position in their respective market segment worldwide In about two thirds of all industry sectors German companies belong to the top three competitors 108 Germany is the only country among the top five arms exporters that is not a permanent member of the United Nations Security Council 109 Services edit See also Tourism in Germany nbsp nbsp Bavaria l is a tourism destination while Berlin r is a centre of creative industries research and education In 2017 services constituted 68 6 of gross domestic product GDP and the sector employed 74 3 of the workforce 65 The subcomponents of services are financial renting and business activities 30 5 trade hotels and restaurants and transport 18 and other service activities 21 7 Germany is the seventh most visited country in the world 110 111 with a total of 407 million overnights during 2012 112 This number includes 68 83 million nights by foreign visitors In 2012 over 30 4 million international tourists arrived in Germany Berlin has become the third most visited city destination in Europe 113 Additionally more than 30 of Germans spend their holiday in their own country with the biggest share going to Mecklenburg Vorpommern Domestic and international travel and tourism combined directly contribute over EUR43 2 billion to German GDP Including indirect and induced impacts the industry contributes 4 5 of German GDP and supports 2 million jobs 4 8 of total employment 114 The largest annual international trade fairs and congresses are held in several German cities such as Hannover Frankfurt and Berlin 115 Government finances editMain articles Taxation in Germany and Federal budget of Germany nbsp German bonds Inverted yield curve in 2008 and Negative interest rates 2014 2022 30 year 10 year 2 year 1 year 3 monthThe debt to GDP ratio of Germany had its peak in 2010 when it stood at 80 3 and decreased since then 116 According to Eurostat the government gross debt of Germany amounts to 2 152 0 billion or 71 9 of its GDP in 2015 117 The federal government achieved a budget surplus of 12 1 billion 13 1 billion in 2015 118 Germany s credit rating by credit rating agencies Standard amp Poor s Moody s and Fitch Ratings stands at the highest possible rating AAA with a stable outlook in 2016 119 Germany s debt clock Schuldenuhr reversed for the first time in 20 years in January 2018 It is now currently increasing at 10 424 00 per second October 2020 120 Economists generally see Germany s current account surplus as undesirable 121 Infrastructure editEnergy edit Main article Energy in Germany Germany is the world s fifth largest consumer of energy and two thirds of its primary energy was imported in 2002 In the same year Germany was Europe s largest consumer of electricity totaling 512 9 terawatt hours Government policy promotes energy conservation and the development of renewable energy sources such as solar wind biomass hydroelectric and geothermal energy As a result of energy saving measures energy efficiency has been improving since the beginning of the 1970s The government has set the goal of meeting half the country s energy demands from renewable sources by 2050 Renewable energy also plays an increasing role in the labour market Almost 700 000 people are employed in the energy sector About 50 per cent of them work with renewable energies 122 nbsp The largest solar power and third largest wind power capacity in the world is installed in Germany In 2000 the red green coalition under Chancellor Schroder and the German nuclear power industry agreed to phase out all nuclear power plants by 2021 123 The conservative coalition under Chancellor Merkel reversed this decision in January 2010 electing to keep plants open The nuclear disaster of the Japanese nuclear plant Fukushima in March 2011 however changed the political climate fundamentally Older nuclear plants have been shut down Germany is seeking to have wind solar biogas and other renewable energy sources play a bigger role as the country looks to completely phase out nuclear power by 2022 and coal fired power plants by 2038 124 Renewable energy yet still plays a more modest role in energy consumption though German solar and wind power industries play a leading role worldwide In 2009 Germany s total energy consumption not just electricity came from the following sources 125 oil 34 6 natural gas 21 7 lignite 11 4 bituminous coal 11 1 nuclear power 11 0 hydro and wind power 1 5 others 9 0 In the first half of 2021 coal natural gas and nuclear energy comprised 56 of the total electricity fed into Germany s grid in the first half of 2021 Coal was the leader out of the conventional energy sources comprising over 27 of Germany s electricity Wind power s contribution to the electric grid was 22 124 There are 3 major entry points for oil pipelines in the northeast the Druzhba pipeline coming from Gdansk west coming from Rotterdam and southeast coming from Nelahozeves The oil pipelines of Germany do not constitute a proper network and sometimes only connect two different locations Major oil refineries are located in or near the following cities Schwedt Spergau Vohburg Burghausen Karlsruhe Cologne Gelsenkirchen Lingen Wilhelmshaven Hamburg and Heide 126 Germany s network of natural gas pipelines on the other hand is dense and well connected Imported pipeline gas comes mostly from Russia the Netherlands and the United Kingdom Although gas imports from Russia have been historically reliable even during the Cold War recent price disputes between Gazprom and former Soviet states such as Ukraine have also affected Germany As a result high political importance is placed on the construction of the Nord Stream 1 pipeline running from Vyborg in Russia along the Baltic sea to Greifswald in Germany This direct connection avoids third party transit countries 126 Germany imports 50 to 75 of its natural gas from Russia 127 Transport edit Main article Transport in Germany nbsp The ICE 3 trainset in FrankfurtWith its central position in Europe Germany is an important transportation hub This is reflected in its dense and modern transportation networks The extensive motorway Autobahn network ranks worldwide third largest in its total length and features a lack of blanket speed limits on the majority of routes 128 Germany has established a polycentric network of high speed trains The Intercity Express or ICE is the most advanced service category of the Deutsche Bahn and serves major German cities as well as destinations in neighbouring countries The train maximum speed varies between 200 km h and 320 km h 125 200 mph Connections are offered at either 30 minute hourly or two hourly intervals 129 German railways are heavily subsidised receiving 17 0 billion in 2014 130 The largest German airports are Frankfurt Airport and Munich Airport both are global hubs of Lufthansa Other major airports are Berlin Brandenburg Airport Dusseldorf Hamburg Hanover Cologne Bonn and Stuttgart Banking system edit 7 German banks are among the biggest in the world As of 2019 Germany is the country in Europe with the highest number of credit institutions between 1 600 and 1 800 131 The types of institutions are in strong competition with each other 390 Sparkassen and 8 public Landesbanken groups 1 200 billion euros of deposits private commercial banks DB Commerzbank and Unicredit HypoVereinsbank for 780 billion cooperative credit banks 700 billion euros savings banks and Raiffeisen The total of the system is worth 3 800 billion 75 of retail customer deposits are managed by savings banks and cooperative credit banks According to Eurostat in 2022 Germany also recorded the highest European rate of gross savings 19 98 of disposable income 132 Technology editMain article List of German inventors and discoverers nbsp Liquid crystal as visualised by a polarizing microscope Germany is a pioneer research centre for nanotechnology and materials engineering 133 Germany s achievements in sciences have been significant and research and development efforts form an integral part of the economy 134 Germany is also one of the leading countries in developing and using green technologies Companies specialising in green technology have an estimated turnover of 200 billion German expertise in engineering science and research is eminently respectable The lead markets of Germany s green technology industry are power generation sustainable mobility material efficiency energy efficiency waste management and recycling sustainable water management 135 Regarding triadic patents Germany is in third place after the U S and Japan With more than 26 500 registrations for patents submitted to the European Patent Office Germany is the leading European nation Siemens Bosch and BASF with almost 5 000 registrations for patents between them in 2008 are among the top 5 of more than 35 000 companies registering patents Together with the U S and Japan about patents for nano bio and new technologies Germany is one of the world s most active nations With around one third of triadic patents Germany leads the way worldwide in the field of vehicle emission reduction 136 According to Winfried Kretschmann who is premier of the region where Daimler is based China dominates the production of solar cells Tesla is ahead in electric cars and Germany has lost the first round of digitalization to Google Apple and the like Whether Germany has a future as an industrial economy will depend on whether we can manage the ecological and digital transformation of our economy 137 Challenges editDespite economic prosperity Germany s biggest threat to future economic development is the nation s declining birthrate which is among the lowest in the world This is particularly prevalent in parts of society with higher education As a result the numbers of workers are expected to decrease and the government spending needed to support pensioners and healthcare will increase if the trend is not reversed 138 Less than a quarter of German people expect living conditions to improve in the coming decades 139 On August 25 2020 Federal Statistical Office of Germany revealed that the German economy plunged by 9 7 in the second quarter which is the worst on record The latest figures show how hard the German economy was hit by the government measures in response to the COVID 19 pandemic 140 Energy intensive German industry and German exporters were hit particularly hard by the 2022 global energy crisis 141 142 Economy Minister Robert Habeck warned that the planned end of Russian energy imports will permanently raise energy prices for German industry and consumers 143 Poverty edit This section is an excerpt from Poverty in Germany edit During the last decades the number of people living in poverty in Germany has been increasing Children are more likely to be poor than adults There has been a strong increase in the number of poor children In 1965 only one in 75 children lived on welfare in 2007 one in 6 did 144 Poverty rates differ by states While in 2005 in states like Bavaria only 6 6 of children and 3 9 of all citizens were impoverished in Berlin 15 2 of the inhabitants and 30 7 of the children received welfare payments 145 The German Kinderhilfswerk an organization caring for children in need has demanded the government to do something about the poverty problem As of 2015 poverty in Germany was at its highest since the German reunification 1990 Some 12 5 million Germans are now classified as poor 146 Homelessness edit This section is an excerpt from Homelessness in Germany edit Homelessness in Germany is a significant social issue one that is estimated to affect around 678 000 people 147 This figure includes about 372 000 people that are accommodated in refugee shelters etc by public services e g by the municipalities 148 Since 2014 there has been a 150 increase in the homeless population within the country 149 Reportedly around 22 000 of the homeless population are children 147 citation needed In addition the country has yet to publish statistics on homelessness at a Federal Level 150 despite it being an ongoing and widespread matter Climate change edit This section is an excerpt from Climate change in Germany Economic impacts edit As a highly industrial urbanized economy with a relatively short coastline compared to other major economies the impacts of climate change on Germany are more narrowly focused than other major economies Germany s traditional industrial regions are typically the most vulnerable to climate change These are mostly located in the provinces of North Rhine Westphalia Saarland Rhineland Palatinate Thuringia Saxony Schleswig Holstein and the free cities of Bremen and Hamburg 151 The Rhineland is historically a heavily industrial and population dense area which includes the states of North Rhine Westphalia Rhineland Palatinate and Saarland This region is rich in iron and coal deposits and supports one of Europe s largest coal industries In the past sulfuric acid emissions from Rhineland coal plants contributed to acid rain damaging forests in other regions like Hesse Thuringia and Saxony Other significant problems for the Rhineland related to its high level of industrialization include the destruction of infrastructure from extreme weather events loss of water for industrial purposes and fluctuation of the ground water level Since these problems are related to its level of industrialization cities within other regions are also sensitive to these challenges including Munich and Bremen See also edit nbsp Germany portal nbsp European Union portal nbsp Business portalAssociation of German Chambers of Industry and Commerce Codetermination in Germany Deutsche Bundesbank German Federal Association of Young Entrepreneurs German model Metropolitan regions in Germany List of German states by unemployment rate List of German cities by GDP Trade unions in GermanyReferences edit World Economic Outlook Database April 2019 IMF org International Monetary Fund Retrieved 29 September 2019 World Bank Country and Lending Groups datahelpdesk worldbank org World Bank Retrieved 29 September 2019 a b c d e f g h i j k l Europe Germany The World Factbook Central Intelligence Agency Retrieved 31 January 2021 Population on 1 January ec europa eu eurostat Eurostat Retrieved 13 July 2020 a b c d e f g World Economic Outlook database October 2023 imf org International Monetary Fund People at risk of poverty or social 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