LEAD STORY
Basket Case
Unemployment, bankruptcies, teetering banks and rising taxes. How did it come to this?

The D Word
Deflation is now Germany's biggest worry, says Chris Redman

Going Under
German state policies toss smaller firms into bankruptcy

Breaking the Banks
Soaring bankruptcies have saddled German banks with billions in bad debts

Stop Press
Newspapers fear they may soon be printing their own obituaries

Table of Contents
The complete list of stories from the Nov 11 issue of TIME magazine

Subscribe to TIME


Switzerland cover Collision Course Is The U.S.-German feud a case of irreconcilable differences?
Switzerland cover Germany Decides Would a Stoiber win have made any difference?
Family Values
Katherina Reiche raises eyebrows

Back to School
Germany's school failures

Laptops and Lederhosen
Stoiber must repeat his Bavarian success


Can the German economy be saved?

Yes
No
Not Sure

NOTE: This is an unscientific, informal survey for the interest and enjoyment of TIME.com users and may not be indicative of popular opinion.



The Federal Returning Officer
Official site (in English) of the 2002 Bundestag elections

Germany Magazine
Magazine on Politics, Culture, Business and Science

Election Topics
Norbert's Bookmarks for a Better World

CNN: German Election
Special reports on the poll from CNN



E-mail your letter to the editor


JENS MEYER/AP
UNDER PRESSURE: German Chancellor Gerhard Schröder

Why Germany Can't Restart The Engine
Unemployment is high, bankruptcies are rife, banks are teetering and taxes are going up. How did the German economy get this bad?

Posted Sunday, Nov 3, 2002; 2.02 p.m. GMT
You know a politician's world is getting grim when he starts telling voters about the need to "sacrifice." Last week Chancellor Gerhard Schröder did just that, saying, in a paraphrase of John F. Kennedy, "Let's stop asking ourselves what doesn't work; let's ask what each and everyone of us can do to make it work." Scarcely a month after he won a wafer-thin re-election victory on promises of no new taxes, Schröder is under fire for trying to solve Germany's economic woes through a series of planned tax hikes and spending cuts, expected to save the government €14 billion in next year's budget. Consumers will pay higher fees on everything from visits to the dentist to overseas airplane tickets, while businesses will see their tax bills rise, too. Germans are now so upset with Schröder that if the election were held today, polls show the Chancellor's coalition of Social Democrats and Greens would be handily beaten by the conservative opposition.

Long regarded as the locomotive of European industry, Germany has recently been behaving more like the caboose. If the Germans can't turn their economy around soon, it risks going the way of Japan, which has suffered a decade-long slide into high unemployment and deflation. Since Germany's industry is closely tied to exports within the euro zone, the faltering economy threatens recovery in other E.U. states like France and Italy. "Deflation is coming into the system and that's what happened in Japan," says Gustav Horn, an economist with the German Institute of Economic Research. "I'm afraid this could start in Germany too next year."

This gloomy outlook was underlined when six economic think tanks issued a joint report slashing in half the growth estimates they made only six months ago. According to consensus figures, growth this year will be a dismal .4% while the forecast for 2003 is an anemic 1.4% (the government estimated growth at .5% and 1.5% for 2003). Even those pessimistic figures were too high for some economists, including Horn, who reckoned next year's growth at only .9%. To top it all off, Finance Minister Hans Eichel acknowledged that Germany would probably breach the rules of the European Union's Stability and Growth Pact this year by running a deficit of more than 3% of gdp — a humiliation for the country that insisted on the 3% ceiling in the first place.

The opposition is making the most of Schröder's woes. Angela Merkel, the head of the Christian Democratic Union, called the tax increases "the biggest deception of voters in post-war history." Guido Westerwelle, head of the Free Democratic Party, accused Schröder of breaking election promises not to raise taxes. For the Chancellor, "renewal means new taxes and new debts," Westerwelle said. "Justice means that everyone has a chance to be unemployed."

Schröder portrayed his budget plans as "balanced overall," arguing that the savings and cuts agreed by his coalition "are only serving the aim of winning new leeway for future investments, growth and employment." He told parliament that some aspects of the welfare state were no longer defensible, but didn't detail planned reforms.

Schröder said he was giving the highest priority to reducing unemployment, which now stands at 9.5% and 17.2% in the economic backwaters of the former East Germany. Wolfgang Clement, who was appointed to a new "superministry" combining economics and labor, said "Initiatives will be rewarded, passivity is no longer acceptable."

Clement said he plans to get the unemployed off the dole and back into the economy. Well, he'd better do it soon. In the first six months of this year tax revenue fell by 4.3% while government spending increased by 4.2%, partly because of the benefits paid to those recently made jobless. "Germany seems caught up in a vicious circle of low employment, which leads to higher claims on the welfare state, which raises wage costs, which leads to higher unemployment," says Dirk Schumacher, German economist at Goldman Sachs in Frankfurt.



Get the Magazine — Try 4 Issues Free!


Sign up for the World Watch newsletter




C I N E M A
Good Old Bond: Four decades after 007 thwarted his first evil genius, he remains cinema's most successful franchise.

B U S I N E S S
Bluetooth Can't Bite Are phone companies holding the wireless wonder back?
C O U R T
Royal Recall Butler's trial collapses as Queen Elizabeth steps in ... eventually

S O C I E T Y
Taking Care
Romanian orphanages are being transformed



ADVERTISEMENT


FROM THE NOV. 11, 2002 ISSUE OF TIME MAGAZINE; POSTED SUNDAY, NOV. 3, 2002

 © 2002 Time Inc. All rights reserved.
Reproduction in whole or in part without permission is prohibited.
FAQ | Site Map | Privacy Policy | Terms of Use