Posts Tagged Investments

German companies continue to make high foreign investments

Investment activities of industrial companies abroad have stabilised at a high level. This is the result of a current survey by the German Chambers of Industry and Commerce (DIHK). According to this survey, 44 per cent of industrial companies are planning to make foreign investments in 2012. Last year this figure was 43 per cent. However, budgets are not rising so quickly here.

The companies surveyed name tapping new markets as the most important motive for foreign commitments. Accordingly, 49 per cent of these companies are investing in sales and customer service abroad. 30 per cent are spending money on production locations outside Germany. However, cost reasons are less and less a reason for foreign investments being made by German companies. Only 21 per cent of those surveyed gave this as a motive. This is the lowest value since the start of the survey in 1999. In comparison, in 2003 42 per cent of companies saw lower costs abroad as an investment reason.

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Experts demand higher R&D investments in Germany

The Expertenkommission Forschung und Innovation (EFI, or Commission of Experts Research and Development), which was set up by the German government, is calling for a consistent development of science intensive industries and services in Germany in its 2012 annual report. In 2010 the proportion of expenditure on research and development (R&D) in Germany was 2.82 per cent of gross domestic product and thus 2010 reached a new high. With expenditure of 69.7 billion euros, of which 46.9 billion came from business, the German economy increased its investments in R&D by 4.3 per cent on the previous year. Nevertheless, the members of the committee were only partially satisfied with these results. In the face of increasing competition, including from developing countries, the experts describe the target set by the government of three per cent of gross domestic product for R&D expenditure by 2015 as “lacking ambition“. Other countries such as Finland, Sweden, Japan and Korea had already left this target level well behind them.

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R&D investments in Germany continue to grow

In 2010 German business spent a total of 46.93 billion euros on internal research and development – 3.7 per cent more than in 2009. These figures were reported by the Stifterverband für die Deutsche Wissenschaft in its current survey. Thus the proportion of business research investment as a share of gross domestic product (GDP) remained at practically the same level as the previous year at 1.89 per cent. Together with state expenditure on R&D the proportion amounted to an estimated 2.82 per cent. According to the latest planning data companies in Germany invested around 49.34 billion euros in 2011; the Stifterverband is even forecasting 49.9 billion euros in 2012.

In contrast, the R&D proportion for the whole European Union was only at an estimated 1.9 per cent in 2010. Thus the EU states missed the target they had set themselves of spending at least three per cent of gross domestic product on R&D investments by a long way. However, the President of the Stifterverband der Wissenschaft, Arend Oetker, assessed developments in Germany positively. The ambitious target induced the German government significantly to increase its research spending. According to the report, the financing share of the state in comparison with business grew noticeably for the first time in 15 years from 2008.

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German companies research more than shown by statistics

In official rankings of R&D expenditure German companies do not do very well in international comparison. If German companies’ R&D expenditure is considered in relation to sales across all sectors, at 3.5 per cent they are well behind competitors from Denmark, Finland, the Netherlands and Sweden with 5 per cent each, US companies with 4.8 per cent and Japanese groups with 3.9 per cent. That these figures distort reality has now been proven by the Deutsche Institut für Wirtschaftsforschung (DIW Berlin, or German Institute for Economic Research) in a study. According to the researchers, if you compare the R&D intensity of competing companies sector by sector, German companies often do better than competitors from the USA, Japan and Europe.

Thus German companies in the chemicals, electrical engineering and mechanical engineering sectors invest a considerably higher proportion of their sales in R&D than their competitors in the USA, Japan or Europe. The specific mechanical engineering figures: Germany 4.4 per cent, the Rest of Europe, USA and Japan 2.7 per cent each. The German pharmaceutical industry is behind Japan in second place.

The DIW Berlin sees the sector structure as the reason for the distortion and not the R&D output of German companies as such. According to the study Germany fell back in general R&D statistics because there were different sector specialisations in the countries compared. In addition, Germany was only represented with a few large companies in development-intensive sectors, such as broadcasting technology and telecommunications, computer production and science-intensive services.

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Great willingness to invest among companies in Germany

This year corporate investments will increase strongly in Germany. This is the result of a survey of economic activity carried out by the German Chamber of Commerce (DIHK). It is expected that investments in new machinery, plant and vehicles will grow by around twelve per cent and that construction investment will rise by at least six per cent. Thus according to the DIHK, investment will have made an unprecedented contribution to growth in united Germany.

Companies in the strong exporting chemical, metal / electrical and vehicle construction sectors want to invest just as strongly as the domestically oriented branches retail as well as construction, which has been more reserved for a long time. This is also reflected positively in corporate staffing planning: 43 per cent of companies with expansive investment plans also want to recruit additional staff; only four per cent want to reduce their head count.

 

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