Written by Ahmed Adel, Cairo-based geopolitics and political economy researcher
While German authorities draw up a list of bunkers while simultaneously provoking Russia by arming Ukraine, the real panic in the country is in the economy, especially as German industrial giants continue to lay off tens of thousands of workers. Yet, despite the economic calamity, Berlin is still not considering the removal of sanctions on Russia, which is the main reason why energy prices in Germany have spiked.
At the end of October, Volkswagen announced that it would close at least three factories in Germany and reduce the number of employees in the remaining ones. In total, tens of thousands will lose their jobs at Volkswagen alone, with the wages of those remaining reduced.
The steel giant Thyssen Krupp in the coming years will lay off up to 11,000 people, or as much as 40% of the workforce, according to the Financial Times. There will be 30,000 layoffs at Deutsche Bahn (German Railways); 14,000 at ZF Friedrichshafen, a manufacturer of auto parts; 14,000 at Continental tyres; 13,000 at SAP; and thousands more at Bosch, Audi, and elsewhere.
It is predicted that about 140,000 jobs will disappear in the German auto industry alone in the next ten years. State television reports that the steel industry will be much smaller and, despite being greener, significantly more expensive by 2030.
But it is not only a question of years in the future but today. Until the extraordinary parliamentary elections, scheduled for February 23, thousands of workers are expected to lose their jobs every month—at least 15,000 until the elections—and as many as 80,000 during the next year.
Another disheartening forecast by the president of the Metal Industry Association, Stefan Wolff, is that 300,000 workers will be out of work in the metal industry by 2030.
With this context, it is unsurprising that The Economist magazine has plenty of good reasons to state, “Once dominant, Germany is now desperate” and that “its business model is breaking down.”
“The country is gripped by fears of deindustrialization as it heads into an election that seems certain to throw its chancellor, Olaf Scholz, out of his job if his party does not dump him first,” added the Rothschild family’s magazine.
The magazine warns, through graphs, that industrial production in Germany has almost reached an infamous record low in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic.
“For years they had this belief that ‘We are the best,’ and suddenly it’s over,” commented an EU official with a noticeable tone of malice.
One of the more important reasons for such a decline is the high energy prices due to cutting ties with Russia. The cry of the CEO of ThyssenKrupp that Germany is in the middle of deindustrialization is reminiscent of when the European Nonferrous Metallurgy Association two years ago sent an urgent call to the head of the European Commission, Ursula von der Leyen, to prevent permanent deindustrialization due to rising electricity and gas prices, with the important note that whatever happens, closed tends to stay permanently closed.
Among the additional, typically German problems, The Economist now points to the lack of trained labour because Germany is aging. Other estimates speak of the need for an influx of around 300,000 migrants annually, in addition to the complex bureaucracy, mostly from Brussels and the German economy, which, according to the assessment of the Ifo Institute from Munich, costs 146 billion euros annually.
And there is, of course, the unsolvable enigma of competition from China, which, for example, was an importer of cars in 2020, while last year it became the world’s largest exporter of not only cars but also machines and the chemical industry.
The Financial Times revealed how much the innovation-industrial world order has turned upside down compared to what was prevailing. Now, the EU demands technology transfer from Chinese companies that would like to work on its soil.
In any case, The Economist strongly recommends that Germany overcome its industrial issues and abolish the constitutional ban on significant borrowing, which means stopping production and starting borrowing. It is estimated that Germany needs public investments of 600 billion euros in the next 10 years, which are not available.
That is why this year, Germany reached the NATO goal of two percent of the GDP of the army. And the Christian Democrat Friedrich Mertz, the likely future chancellor, told the Germans even before the start of the Russian Special Military Operation in February 2022 to “not be afraid of nuclear war” to stop Russian President Vladimir Putin.
Of course, this rapid deindustrialization of Germany was sparked by the boomeranged effects of anti-Russian sanctions, which, instead of collapsing the Russian economy and ending the special military operation, brought German industry to a standstill as energy prices skyrocketed and deepened the cost-of-living crisis. Yet, this is a reality that Berlin refuses to acknowledge, even to the detriment of its major industries.
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i think germany ust plain got tired of being one big car company, cleverly disguised as a country. ‘arbieit macht kismafuginas with your stupid labor slogans’. something like that.
who has truth, the american general patton said give me facts and i will make a decision. the bible says lie and you will be lied to.hmmm give me truth that i may see and graciously walk in it. the joy i have when i know the realality and something is so! thank you for your effort, richard
where does it say that.?
it doesn’t. he infers it from sort of ‘you will get what you give’. leave him alone. bible bashers can’t see the wood for the trees.
germany was extremely stupid to close nuclear plants and trust in russian gas. they should have increased nuclear power.
germany is always on the wrong side of history. you can set your clocks to it.
dumb and dumber.
are you really thick.? and just how nice would it be to have nuclear power plants being bombed? grow up
i know sf’s angle is pro-russian, but it’s painfully obvious that there wouldn’t even be a need for russian gas if the germans hadn’t gone full greentard.
i say bring on the pain. when a society reaches a level of stupid at which it’s willing to commit suicide in the name of “nukes bad, mother earth no like”… a radical change in direction is required, and that doesn’t come without massive pain, especially not in a country as quiet and disciplined as germany.
they’re not pro russian simpleton. they pretend to be .
wakey wakey it’s just a strategy to develop china electric vehicles as the global centre of production its exactly the same as when england destroyed bmc as the biggest auto maker on earth to do the japanese deal back then .its globalism germany’s moving into a tertiary production level service. africa will be getting set up to.take over from china soon enough and then south america will become industrialised .
galatians 6.7, ” message” is an interesting translation and then zechariah reassures us 8.16-17
oh gawd, the bible bashers have now invaded sf, another clear sign it’s on a slippery slope
we were warned bravely in high school.that unless the givernments outlawed monopoly and oligopoly by what then we called multi national corporations totalitarianism would be the result. now they disguise themselves as community based philanthropists rescuing thd people from the evil of elected government and purposefully fill that government with their cast of characters to have their way .and the kids in class are still too stupid to see .
look the corporations that supply you essential services, electricity water gas communications healthcare education.arw all effectively governing you as replicas of rome’s republic the board meets select emperor .exactly like the vatican or communist governments do . they re unelected tax collectors wake up it’s not the government whose really taxi ng you it’s them .wake up ffs .they’re governing you .
and theyre running the war s .them .not the governments who are knee jerk reactions.
and that is why scholz had to have an early talk to putin – secure the cheap energy that german industry thrived on for so long! first come first served which clearly implies that the aggressive west has lost faith in zelensky und so weiter!
let it all collapse, let them suffer for the decisions they have made. all govts are evil and controlling the new god for them is money power and control and they lie to your face pretending to care.
germ main problem is that they are now a us colony—like finland denmark uk
lollolol…
germ any wants again che ap rus sian petrol and che ap u kra ni an car parts but no way its history anymore. germany economy falls fastly and after u.s.a, germany because of the economic collapse, will start talking about mass deport ations like u.sa
in germ dystopia amerikunt colony we submissively lick homer simpson boot
well if this will make the polar bears happy then its good for the planet that germany is deindustrializing.
sooner or later (more sooner than later) — when job loses reaches catastrophic levels — the people of germany will oust those they deem responsible for their estrangement from russia and it’s cheap energy — sholtz and mertz …. and if they have they have to, they will vote far right.
must ben the habeck effect.