Snaps
30 September 2020

Germany: Positive surprise

The German labour market has posted its best September performance since 2012 but structural transitions could still push up unemployment in 2021

Brandenburg Gate, Germany
Shutterstock

German unemployment dropped by 108,000 in September, lowering the number of unemployed to 2.847 million - the lowest level since May this year. This is actually the best September performance since 2012, suggesting that the negative impact from the Covid-19 crisis is gradually weakening. At least for now.

According to the German labour agency, new applications for short-time work schemes slowed further in September to 85,000 from 1 million in May and 8 million in April. Remember that not all filed applications will eventually be admitted. This is why, officially, 4.2 million employees received short-time work subsidies in July, from 5.4 million in June and almost 6 million in April. According to recent estimates by the Ifo institute, on the back of their own business survey, the number of people in short-time work schemes has dropped from 4.7 million in August to 3.7 million in September.

Looking ahead, ongoing structural transitions in many sectors as well as the longer-term impact from social distancing and Covid-19 restrictions are likely to increase unemployment in the course of 2021. The 2008/9 crisis was only a brief interruption of the structural improvement in the German labour market, driven by structural changes in the mid-2000s and a long-lasting economic recovery. Still, it took almost two years before the unemployment rate returned to its pre-crisis level. This time around, however, there is an increasing risk that the Covid-19 crisis could enhance structural shifts, structurally pushing up the unemployment level.

Currently, short-time work schemes and a relatively stable labour market are supportive for private consumption, as illustrated, for example, in this morning’s positive retail sales numbers (+3.1% month-on-month). However, don’t forget that the labour market is no longer a natural stronghold of the economy but rather a stronghold supported by fiscal steroids.