German economy grew by 8.5% in third quarter, but recession fears grow
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[BERLIN] Germany's gross domestic product grew by a record 8.5 per cent in the third quarter as Europe's largest economy partly recovered from an unprecedented plunge caused by the first wave of the Covid-19 pandemic in spring, the statistics office said on Tuesday.
The stronger-than expected rebound was mainly driven by higher household spending and soaring exports, the office said.
"This enabled the German economy to make up for a large part of the massive decline in gross domestic product caused by the coronavirus pandemic in the second quarter of 2020," it added.
The reading marked an upward revision to an earlier flash estimate of 8.2 per cent growth, and followed a 9.8 per cent plunge in the second quarter.
The outlook is clouded by a second wave of coronavirus infections and a partial lockdown to slow the spread of the disease. Restaurants, bars, hotels and entertainment venues have been closed since Nov 2, but shops and schools remain open.
Chancellor Angela Merkel and regional state premiers are planning to extend the "lockdown-light" on Wednesday until Dec 20, according to a draft prepared for their meeting.
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A contraction in the service sector is expected to weigh heavily on gross domestic product in the fourth quarter, while lockdown measures in other countries are likely to hit export-oriented manufacturers as well.
DIW economist Claus Michelsen said a decline in economic output was therefore on the cards, with initial estimates indicating a GDP drop of around 1 per cent in the final quarter.
"Germany and many important trading partners are likely to slide back into recession," Mr Michelsen said.
REUTERS
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