Planned immigration law should help to attract skilled workers
BERLIN (Reuters) — The German economy is losing steam as rising trade tensions abroad and a lack of skilled workers at home limit the growth prospects for Europe's largest economy, Economy Minister Peter Altmaier said on Thursday.
Presenting the government's downwardly revised growth forecasts, Altmaier said the economy would expand by 1.8 per cent in both 2018 and 2019.
This compared with earlier projections of 2.3 per cent and 2.1 per cent respectively. In 2017, the economy grew by a calendar-adjusted 2.5 per cent.
Germany's vibrant domestic economy will continue to propel growth this year and next, with imports rising at a faster pace than exports and net trade expected to hold back an upswing that is seen entering its 10th year in 2019, Altmaier said.
"This is the longest upswing since 1966, the second longest ever," he added, pointing to record-high employment, rising real wages and planned tax relief for workers.
Germany's strong domestic demand means that rising imports will help to lower the country's large current account surplus to 7.1 per cent of GDP in 2019 and 6.7 per cent in 2020.
The growth outlook is clouded, however, by protectionist tendencies and U.S. trade disputes with Europe and China, Altmaier said. The economy would also expand at a faster rate if companies were able to find skilled workers more quickly.
The centre-right minister called for swift implementation of an EU-U.S. tariffs deal reached earlier this year to solve the transatlantic trade conflict.
Germany and its European allies will also support efforts to safeguard the rules-based free trade order by reforming the World Trade Organization (WTO), Altmaier said.
Turning to the problem of labour shortages, Altmaier said a planned immigration law should help to attract skilled workers from countries outside the European Union. He urged cabinet to pass the legislation before the end of the year.
A poll conducted for ARD broadcaster showed on Thursday that 71 per cent backed the planned immigration law while 26 per cent were against it, suggesting that the move could turn out to be less risky for Merkel's coalition government than expected.