Regional Differences in European GDP Trends

On Monday, Germany’s GDP print for the final quarter of 2022 came out below expectations of 0.0% by -2%. This negative (rather than stagnant) figure makes the -0.5% print forecast for Q1 2023 a more foreboding prediction for Germany’s economy.

France’s expected GDP for Q4 was similarly 0.0%, but yesterday, unlike Germany, France beat expectations by 0.1%. For the Eurozone Aggregate, a beat by 0.2% over the survey median of -0.1% showed an expansion across the continent. Both the French and Eurozone GDP beating expectations and coming in positive helped to ameliorate recession fears across Europe that were intensified by Germany’s disappointing number two days ago.

Why the difference? German “soft-data” – like news about the mild winter – has been rosy of late. I see this GDP number as a reconciliation to the hard data. While energy subsidies and the weather certainly worked in their favor, Germany is the largest manufacturing economy in Europe, and there is simply no getting around the fact that this makes them more susceptible to energy prices.