Ifo Institute expects recession and rising inflation

Containers at the port of Stuttgart

The Ifo Institute only expects growth of 1.6 percent for the current year.

(Photo: dpa)

Berlin The Ifo Institute expects inflation rates to continue to rise and economic output to shrink in Germany. For this year, the Munich economists expect an inflation rate of 8.1 percent and next year of 9.3 percent.

According to the Ifo economic forecast presented in Berlin on Monday, the economy will only grow by 1.6 percent this year and will even shrink by 0.3 percent in the coming year.

“We’re going into a winter recession,” said Timo Wollmershäuser, head of Ifo economic research. The cut in gas supplies from Russia and the drastic price hikes that followed “hail the economic recovery after Corona,” he said. “Not until 2024 do we expect normalization with 1.8 percent growth and 2.5 percent inflation.”

The energy suppliers noticeably adjusted their electricity and gas prices to the high procurement costs at the beginning of next year. That will even push up the inflation rate to around 11 percent in the first quarter. As a result, real household incomes fell sharply and purchasing power fell noticeably, according to the economic researchers.

Top jobs of the day

Find the best jobs now and
be notified by email.

The relief package is unlikely to make up for this by far. “The loss of purchasing power, measured by the decline in real per capita wages by around 3 percent this year and next, is higher than at any time since today’s national accounts began in 1970,” said Wollmershäuser.

>> Read here: Relief package: How the middle class and recipients benefit from Hartz IV

However, the Ifo Institute does not expect any serious effects on the labor market. The increase in employment will only slow down temporarily. The number of unemployed is likely to rise by 50,000 in the coming year. But that is mainly due to Ukrainians, who are only gradually being integrated into the labor market.

More: Economic research institutes are forecasting a recession and damage of up to 150 billion euros for the first time

source site-12