By AP /
David Rising Jan. 08, 2014Add a Comment
(BERLIN ) — Germany ’s trade
surplus widened to a near record in November, official figures showed Wednesday
in a development that may add potential fuel to critics’ concerns that the
country is not spending enough to help out its struggling partners in the
eurozone.
The figures
could well form the backdrop to discussions later between U.S. Treasury
Secretary Jacob Lew and German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble. Lew has
voiced his opinion that Germany
should be looking to get its current account more into balance as a means of
shoring up the eurozone’s stragglers.
Wednesday’s
figures from the Federal Statistical Office showed Germany posting a surplus in
November of 17.8 billion euros ($24.2 billion), up from a downwardly revised
16.7 billion the previous month. A more detailed look showed exports rose 0.3
percent compared with the previous month to 93.2 billion euros when adjusted
for seasonal and calendar factors, while imports declined 1.1 percent to 75.4
billion euros.
The United States , for one, has urged Germany to
spend more while the International Monetary Fund has said a smaller surplus is
the only way to even out the imbalances that plague the eurozone.
Speaking in
Paris on Tuesday, Lew didn’t specifically
mention Germany but his
message seemed aimed at Berlin
as he pushed for European countries to help consumers and companies spend.
“Short-term
demand has to be part of the agenda in terms of keeping growth moving in the
right direction,” he said.
Chris
Williamson, chief economist at Markit, cautioned that a German move to
emphasize exports less may not have the positive effect on the eurozone that
some think.
“The
widening surplus is likely to put increasing political pressure on Germany to
rebalance its economy away from export-oriented growth towards domestic
consumption,” he said. “However, the flip-side is that stronger German export
gains, especially to non-euro countries, helps boost business activity at
companies within the euro area that are suppliers to German firms.”
Read more:
German Turns Near Record Trade Surplus in November | TIME.com
http://business.time.com/2014/01/08/german-turns-near-record-trade-surplus-in-november/#ixzz2qSXcYG4O
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