Germany's Economy Is Sicker Than You Think

(Bloomberg Opinion) -- There’s no question that Germany has done relatively well during this annus horribilis, and that the administration of Chancellor Angela Merkel deserves most of the credit. But the country could soon have a different problem. The same government policies that worked so well in the first phase of the corona-recession could do major damage in the second phase and thereafter.

Germany can certainly be proud of what it has achieved this year. It “flattened the curve” of Covid-19 transmission early on. And with a dizzying array of stimulus spending and other measures, it has pumped some 1 trillion euros ($1.18 trillion) into its economy.

Thanks to all this, output has been growing again since May. The government now reckons the contraction for the whole year will be milder than originally assumed, at “only” minus 5.8%. By early 2022, the economy should be at pre-crisis levels again. Economy Minister Peter Altmaier (pictured) has been flaunting V-shaped recovery charts.

In particular, Germany has been good at saving jobs. It’s done this in part by suspending normal bankruptcy rules, thus keeping more employers afloat. Simultaneously, the government has used a century-old policy tool to keep employees in their jobs even if they have no work to do. These measures kept unemployment at 4.4% as of July, when the average was 7.2% in the European Union and 10.2% in the U.S.

This now-famous policy instrument is called Kurzarbeit, literally “short-time work.” In a nutshell, the government subsidizes firms to keep workers on their payrolls even when idled. The employees continue getting most of their normal paychecks and are ready to return to work as soon as there is renewed demand. Kurzarbeit was a big reason why Germany emerged relatively unscathed from the Great Recession of 2008-09. Viewed as the international “gold standard” of work-benefit schemes, it’s been copied across Europe and beyond.

But the subsidization of work not actually done and the de facto suspension of insolvency procedures were only meant to be temporary measures. And yet, the Merkel cabinet recently prolonged both programs. Kurzarbeit has been extended through the end of 2021.

The fear among many German economists is that the combination of these policies will create “zombie companies” — firms that should really die and exit the market because of problems unrelated to the pandemic, but that are instead kept alive artificially. An estimated 550,000 firms could already be zombies, according to one estimate, and this could grow to perhaps 800,000 next year.