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VDMA: orders remain weak in Germany

German companies once again recorded a 3 per cent increase in domestic orders but their export orders for sending machinery outside the country were 14 per cent down.
By David Arminas December 3, 2024 Read time: 2 mins
For the first 10 months of the current year, orders are now down by a total of 8 per cent (image © Markusvolk/Dreamstime)

In Germany, incoming orders in the machinery and equipment manufacturing sector remained weak in October, 9 per cent short of the previous year's level.

According to the VDMA - which represents 3,600 German companies as well as European machinery and equipment manufacturing companies operating in Germany, companies once again recorded a 3 per cent increase in domestic orders. Yet, at the same time, foreign orders were 14 per cent below the previous year's level, with the 14 per cent decline in euro countries similar to that in non-euro countries, around 13 per cent.

"Both results should not be overestimated," said Ralph Wiechers, VDMA’s chief economist. "The domestic increase is based on an extremely weak comparative basis in the previous year. The sharp drop in foreign business, on the other hand, can be explained by large-scale plant business a year ago. For the first 10 months of the current year, orders are now down by a total of 8 per cent. It remains the case that customers in the mechanical engineering sector are very reluctant to make new investments."

In the less volatile three-month period from August to October this year, 3 per cent fewer orders were recorded in real terms. Domestic orders were down 7 per cent and orders from abroad were down 1 per cent - euro countries were down 4 per cent and no change recorded for non-euro countries.

To watch a video presentation by VDMA Chief Economist Ralph Wiechers, visit the organisation’s website, www.vdma.org.

The companies that are represented by the VDMA employ around three million people within the European Union’s 27 member countries - more than 1.2 million of them are in Germany. This makes mechanical and plant engineering the largest employer among the capital goods industries, both in the EU-27 and in Germany. In the European Union, it represents a turnover volume of an estimated €910 billion. Around 80 per cent of the machinery sold in the EU comes from a manufacturing plant in the domestic market. 

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