Bloomberg
By Rainer Buergin and Simone Meier - Dec 20, 2011 1:01 AM
GMT+0200
… The risk to Germany , …is
that transforming the region’s struggling nations into blueprints of itself may
work too well…
… German labor costs
rose at half the pace of Greece ’s…
… Schroeder unveiled
his package … It took almost two
years before the labor market began to show results,…
… Northern Italy,
especially the region around Milan ,
is as good as Baden-Wuerttemberg…
As governments from Italy
to Spain and Ireland seek to
convince Chancellor Angela Merkel and bondholders that they can fix their
balance sheets, officials are pushing through policies designed to restore
their competitiveness.
The risk to Germany , whose
exports account for almost half of gross domestic product, is that transforming
the region’s struggling nations into blueprints of itself may work too well.
Efforts by euro-region governments to cut labor costs may help exporters across
southern Europe challenge the dominance of German competitors, ranging from
Siemens AG, Europe ’s largest engineering
company, to carmaker Bayerische Motoren Werke AG.
“It’s true, it’s our fate that competition will increase and
we’ll have to hurry up to get better as well, ”Wolfgang Clement, a former
government minister who oversaw former German Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder’s
economic policy revamp, said in an interview. “My big concern is that we become
complacent amid all this talk of Germany being strong.”
Export Growth
German labor costs rose at half the pace of Greece ’s
in the 10 years through 2010, according to the IMK economic institute in Dusseldorf . Export growth averaged 5.2 percent per year
in the same period, compared with 3.1 percent for Italy .
With the euro region
still Germany ’s
largest export market, Merkel is pushing debt-strapped nations to follow
her country’s lead and push through measures to promote economic growth and
reduce deficits.
“I would rather focus on growing competitiveness in Europe than constantly having to worry about rescue
programs,” Merkel said in March. “We’re ensuring that Europe
as a whole improves.”
That same month, Merkel and French President Nicolas Sarkozy
got most of the European Union to sign up to the so- called Euro-Plus Pact to
boost competitiveness.
While efforts to stem Europe ’s
debt crisis have focused on coordinating fiscal policies, leaders also have
sought measures to foster growth. As market turmoil threatens economies and
corporate earnings across the region, cash-strapped euro members are succumbing
to such pressure in order to catch up with better-performing peers.
Revamp Call
Increases in employment costs of all euro nations outpaced Germany ’s in
the decade through 2010. German hourly labor costs rose an average 1.7 percent
per year, while they jumped 2.9 percent in Portugal ,
3.2 percent in Italy , 3.4
percent in Greece and 4.1
percent in Spain ,
the labor union-affiliated IMK institute said Dec. 12. The figures were based
on calculations from Eurostat, the EU statistics agency.
“Based on the wage restraint we’ve seen over the past years
in Germany ,
we still have a certain head start,” said Thilo Heidrich, a Bonn-based
economist at Deutsche Postbank AG. “Over the medium term though, competition
should increase.”
Pledged Measures
Spanish Prime Minister-elect
Mariano Rajoy pledged yesterday that his
new government will overhaul the labor market in the first quarter and cut
taxes for small companies. Italy , the
region’s third-largest economy after Germany
and France ,
plans to overhaul its employment laws. Details will be announced “within
weeks,” Prime Minister Mario Monti said on Dec. 4.
The challenge for such countries will be to match Germany . Schroeder unveiled his package of
labor, health, pension and tax policy changes in March 2003, focused on
revamping the economy by 2010. It took
almost two years before the labor market began to show results, said
Clement, who served under the Social Democrat chancellor as economy and labor
minister.
‘Long Process’
“It’s a very long process to become competitive,” said
Andreas Scheuerle, an economist at Dekabank in Frankfurt .
“It took a long time for German companies to boost their competitiveness by
means of wage restraint.”
Monti can change the nation’s economy for the better, maybe
in a shorter period than it took Schroeder’s government, said Giancarlo Losma,
president of filtration systems maker Losma SpA in Curno, Italy, which is about
55 kilometers (34 miles) northeast of Milan.
“I know that it took Germany more or less seven years to
reap the benefits of the actions by Mr. Schroeder,” he said. “We need to move
faster this time. I’m convinced that we’ll get some positive feedback in a
shorter time.”
Some Italian exporters are already well positioned to
benefit. Ralph Wiechers, chief economist at Germany ’s
VDMA machine maker’s lobby, said in an interview that Italy has
always been “a competitive rival.”
Clement, who’s a member of supervisory boards at companies
including Ascheberg, Germany-based Daldrup & Soehne AG (4DS), a provider of
drilling services, agrees with Wiechers.
Italian Rivalry
“Northern Italy,
especially the region around Milan , is as good
as Baden-Wuerttemberg” in Germany ,
home to such companies as Daimler AG (DAI) and Robert Bosch GmbH, he said.
“It’s as good as it gets in Europe .”
One Italian export champion is Milan-based Luxottica Group
SpA (LUX), the world’s largest eyewear maker, which on Oct. 24 reported
third-quarter earnings growth that exceeded analysts’ estimates. Chief
Executive Officer Andrea Guerra said he sees “significant opportunities for
growth.” The company’s 10 percent share-price drop this year compares with the
28 percent slump of the benchmark FTSE-MIB (FTSEMIB) stock index.
Companies outside Germany have
started squeezing workers to increase productivity and ease pressure on
margins. Italian carmaker Fiat SpA (F) and its former heavy-vehicle unit Fiat
Industrial SpA signed a collective labor deal with 86,000 employees on Dec. 13
to lengthen shifts and shorten breaks in exchange for a 20 billion-euro ($26
billion) investment plan.
Employees and executives at
Nicolas Correa SA, Spain ’s
biggest maker of milling machines, now clean up their own desks to reduce
costs. They also voluntarily took a 25 percent pay cut in 2009, Ana Nicolas
Correa, secretary of the board, said in an interview. The company exports 95
percent of its products.
Stronger economies in southern Europe would benefit Germany as it would bolster sales for exporters,
said Ralph Solveen, an economist at Commerzbank AG in Frankfurt .
“If there were more people employed in northern Italy , they
might also spend more money and possibly even buy German cars,” he said.
“Overall, there’s a chance that Germany
would benefit more than it would lose.”
To contact the reporters on this story: Rainer Buergin in Berlin at rbuergin1@bloomberg.net; Simone Meier in Zurich at
smeier@bloomberg.net
To contact the editors responsible for this story: Craig
Stirling at cstirling1@bloomberg.net; James Hertling at jhertling@bloomberg.net
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