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Ifo Economic Forecast 2011: Upswing continues at a slower pace

Kai Carstensen, Wolfgang Nierhaus, Klaus Abberger, Tim Oliver Berg, Teresa Buchen, Christian Breuer, Steffen Elstner, Christian Grimme, Steffen Henzel, Nikolay Hristov, Michael Kleemann, Johannes Mayr, Wolfgang Meister, Georg Paula, Johanna Garnitz, Klaus Wohlrabe, Timo Wollmershäuser
ifo Institut für Wirtschaftsforschung, München, 2010

ifo Schnelldienst, 2010, 63, Nr. 24, 18-68

On 14 December 2010 the Ifo Institute presented its forecast for 2010 and 2011 at its pre-Christmas press conference. The recovery in the German economy that began more than a year ago continued with considerably dynamism. With the initial stimulus coming from abroad, over the past three quarters the domestic economy has increasingly gained importance. A key factor was the investment stimulus that resulted from historically low interest-rate levels. Driven by a strongly expanding industrial core, total economic output in the final quarter of 2010 will accelerate slightly by 0.8%, seasonally and calendar adjusted. On average for 2010, real GDP will expand by 3.7%. For the coming year the "traffic lights" of economic activity remain "green" for Germany, with GDP increasing by 2.4% - with a 67% confidence interval of between 1.4% and 3.4%. The decisive factor here is the development of domestic demand. With all this, the employment situation should improve, and the unemployment rate should fall to 7.0%. In the wake of the upswing, consumer prices will increase somewhat, but at a likely 1.7% the inflation rate will still be below the target of the European Central Bank. The budget deficit, which this year was 3.5% of GDP, will fall to 2.3% next year as a result of the continuingly good economy, the consolidation measures within the framework of the "future package" and the savings in statutory health insurance.

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ifo Institut für Wirtschaftsforschung, München, 2010