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In a stunning revelation that has economists reaching for their anxiety medication, Germany's premier economic research body, the ifo Institute, has released data suggesting the country's industrial heart isn't just skipping beats - it might be coding. A whopping 41.5% of German businesses are now reporting critical order shortages, marking the worst performance since the 2009 financial crisis.
"Remember when 'Made in Germany' meant quality manufacturing, not quality virtue signaling?" quipped one Frankfurt-based analyst, speaking on condition of anonymity. "We're witnessing what happens when you try to run factories on good intentions and sunshine."
The data paints a picture of an economy increasingly strangled by a perfect storm of self-imposed challenges. While politicians champion their "green transformation," businesses are seeing more red than green on their balance sheets. The automotive sector, once Germany's crown jewel, is being forced through an unprecedented transition that has many questioning if the cure might be worse than the disease.
Germany basically is conducting the world's largest economic experiment of how to transform a first-world industrial powerhouse into a third-world economy while maintaining a straight face about it.
The numbers tell a sobering story:
  • 41.5% of businesses reporting order shortages (up from 39.4% in July)
  • Manufacturing sector confidence at historic lows
  • Investment flight accelerating
  • Energy costs crippling production
Meanwhile, demographic challenges and high fiscal burdens continue to weigh heavily on businesses, creating what one industry leader described as "the perfect storm of economic masochism."
While other nations watch Germany's great green experiment with a mixture of concern and schadenfreude, the real question remains: Will Europe's economic engine rediscover its industrial roots, or will it complete its transformation into what critics are now calling "Europe's most ambitious renewable poverty project"?
The ifo Institute's warning comes as a stark reminder that good intentions don't pay bills, and solar panels don't manufacture steel. As winter approaches, Germany's industrial leaders are left wondering if their economic future is as reliable as their renewable energy grid - which, coincidentally, isn't very reassuring at all.
68 sats \ 2 replies \ @galt 11 Nov
I thought the communist experiment ended after the state of eastern Germany showed how central planning was doomed. Apparently Germans want another try, very best of luck on landing
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It's GDR 2.0.
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The Wests economies were a mix of central planning and free markets from the 1930s to the 1970s. Since then neoliberalism led to the bankers controlling our governments.Its been truly downhill ever since. Throw in some blame on the woke left if you must, they probably deserve it.
China demonstrates to anyone with an eye to history and economics and empires, that a careful mix of state strategy and free markets is a potent force for growth and power. The wests governments are now directed by bankers/corporates/capital....ie crony capitalism. In China the government directs capital. In China where 80% of the politburo are engineers.
China is now challenging the west militarily through its proxies Iran and Russia. The west seems asleep to the imminent demise of its hegemony...China has perhaps beaten it at its own game...capitalism.
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will any lessons be learned by other EU countries? i think not. just following Gaermany off a cliff at this point
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We as the 'sovereign' can only do our part individually: build strong families, protect yozr wealth
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true, thankfully we can use bitcoin for this and just feel sorry for the average EU citizen stacking their life savings in the euro shitcoin
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