German Industrial Output Rises More Than Expected in February

Photo: Reuters

The Facts

  • After growing 3.7% in January, German industrial production rose for a second consecutive month in February, jumping 2% from the previous month at a significantly higher percentage than the 0.1% increase analysts expected.

  • According to the German statistics office Destatis, the country's industrial production has now risen 5.8% since December and is 0.6% above the levels seen a year earlier. This includes a month-over-month manufacturing increase of 2.4%, most notably 7.6% in its largest sector of motor vehicle production.


The Spin

Narrative A

Though it's being reported as such, this report shouldn't be much of a surprise given recent policy trends in Germany and the EU. Measures such as transitioning to clean energy vehicles and capping gas and electricity prices, combined with the mild winter, have enabled the economy to avoid the worst of the energy and supply chain crises. Though inflation will still be an issue this year, Germans should be more hopeful than previously told.

Narrative B

Despite the positive outlook portrayed in this report, 41.6% of German manufacturing companies said in March that they're still facing supply chain issues. On top of that, over 60% of manufacturers of machinery and equipment, electrical and electronics companies, and automakers reported bottlenecks in raw materials and intermediate products. Germany has a long way to go before its manufacturing industry can truly take a breath from this complex crisis.