German industrial output posted its biggest monthly rise in more than six years in August, data showed on Monday.
Manufacturing
output rose by 3.2 percent, its biggest rise since March 2010, as
factories churned out more intermediate goods, capital goods and
consumer goods in August. Energy output also rose while construction
activity fell.
The
biggest risks to Germany’s upswing come from the outside, Brzeski said,
pointing to geopolitical risks, the stronger euro and a possible
slowdown of the U.S. economy as a result of further absence of tax
relief or investment programs.
It
suggested the economy is firing on all cylinders again and set for
solid growth in the third quarter, although a question about the make up
of the new government could add uncertainty.
The
combined production of manufacturing, construction and energy increased
by 2.6 percent on the month after edging down by 0.1 percent in July,
data from the Economy Ministry showed.
That was
the strongest monthly gain since July 2011 and easily beat expectations
in a Reuters poll for a 0.7 percent rise, surpassing even the most
optimistic estimate.
Data published on Friday showed that strong foreign
demand, especially from clients outside the euro zone, drove a
bigger-than-expected jump in industrial orders in August.
ING
Bank chief economist Carsten Brzeski said the strong production data
provided further evidence that the economy had left its summer lull
behind and returned to maximum speed.
The German economy grew 0.7 percent on the quarter
in the first three months of the year and 0.6 percent from April to
June, driven by increased household and state spending as well as higher
investment in buildings and machinery.
Leading
economic institutes have raised their growth forecast for the German
economy to 1.9 percent in 2017 and 2.0 percent in 2018.
The German government will present its updated projections for GDP growth, employment and inflation on Wednesday.
The economy might even benefit from a small
post-election fiscal boost, McKeown said, adding she expected German GDP
to rise by an even stronger rate of 2.3 percent this year.

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