Germany’s economy shrank by 0.3 percent in the second quarter of 2025 compared with the previous three months, according to revised data from the Federal Statistical Office. The contraction was sharper than the initial estimate of a 0.1 percent decline and highlights renewed weakness in Europe’s largest economy. The latest figures point to broad-based deterioration across several areas of the economy. Industrial production slowed, investment in capital goods dropped by nearly 2 percent, and construction activity contracted by more than 2 percent.

Exports also fell, reflecting reduced demand from international markets. These declines erased the modest growth Germany achieved earlier in the year. Household consumption provided only marginal support, with a 0.1 percent increase, while government spending rose by 0.8 percent. Services such as accommodation and food contributed to the limited gains in consumer activity, but they were not enough to counter the slump in investment and trade. Economists note that foreign trade made little overall contribution to growth, underscoring the weakness of external demand.
The contraction places Germany back into recessionary territory after a fragile rebound in the first quarter. Over the past ten quarters, the economy has stagnated or declined in six, leaving output only slightly above its pre-pandemic level in 2019. Analysts point to structural challenges, including reliance on exports, demographic pressures, and slow progress on digital transformation, as key obstacles weighing on performance.
Outlook highlights long road ahead for German recovery
The decline in exports is partly linked to the full impact of new U.S. tariffs on European goods, which hit German industry in the second quarter. Many American importers had rushed to stock up ahead of the tariffs earlier in the year, boosting first-quarter numbers, but the subsequent slowdown was sharper than expected. With trade tensions showing no immediate signs of easing, German exporters face continued uncertainty.
Chancellor Friedrich Merz has made economic revitalization his administration’s top priority since taking office in May. His government has announced large-scale fiscal measures, including a €500 billion infrastructure program, tax relief packages, and efforts to accelerate regulatory reforms. The investment plan is aimed at bolstering construction, energy transition projects, and digital infrastructure, but economists warn that tangible effects may take time to materialize. At the same time, a consortium of private companies has pledged more than €600 billion in investment commitments over the next three years.
Economists warn growth unlikely to rebound before 2026
Business leaders describe these plans as a signal of confidence in Germany’s long-term prospects, though many of the projects are not expected to be fully realized until 2026 or later. The European Central Bank recently cut interest rates to 2 percent to stimulate growth across the eurozone. ECB President Christine Lagarde has cautioned, however, that growth is slowing across the region, limiting the scope for monetary policy alone to lift output.
For Germany, which remains heavily dependent on trade and industry, fiscal and structural reforms are likely to be decisive. Germany now stands out among G7 economies as the only one struggling to overcome prolonged stagnation. The second-quarter downturn raises concerns about whether planned fiscal stimulus and investment commitments can restore momentum quickly enough. Without stronger growth in domestic demand and resolution of trade headwinds, the road to recovery may prove long and uneven. – By EuroWire News Desk.
