“Today’s Germany is the best Germany the world has seen.” So effused the Washington Post columnist George F. Will five long years ago. It’s hard to imagine anyone — even a German — writing those words today. The country is in crisis. On Monday, Chancellor Olaf Scholz lost a humiliating no-confidence vote, and now Germany is hurtling towards a divisive snap election in February. The nation’s economy has barely grown since 2018, and it is de-industrialising at an alarming rate. The unfolding calamity represents a strategic opening for China and Russia which the West cannot afford to ignore.
At the root of Germany’s industrial woes is electricity, which is now nearly twice as expensive as it is for their American counterparts, and three times more expensive than in China. Prices have been rising since the early 2000s, but a policy embraced by the German government in 2011, following the nuclear meltdown at Fukushima, sealed the nation’s fate. The proponents of the Energiewende (“energy revolution”) policy made the astonishing argument that Germany could rapidly abandon both fossil fuels and nuclear energy without losing its industrial edge. This was, as one Oxford study put it, a “gamble”. Or a game of Russian roulette, a cynic might have added.
The gamble hasn’t paid off. Even Germany’s gas-related dealings with Russia — a source of Russo-American tension since the Sixties — couldn’t stop prices rising throughout the 2010s. They were significant enough, however, to make the shock of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in 2022 nearly lethal for German industry. Today, electricity prices are at their highest since 2000, with total production hitting its lowest point since then.
This makes it incredibly tough for Germany to compete with China. Not only does Russian gas continue to flow to China in ever greater quantities, but the Chinese are also receiving sanctioned Iranian oil; installing more than 90% of the world’s new coal power capacity; putting the finishing touches on a hydroelectric infrastructure that already generates more power than Japan; and building ever more nuclear power plants. All this has ensured a fundamental manufacturing advantage over Germany.
But there’s more to the tale of German decline than cheap electricity. The past two decades have also witnessed an industrial revolution of sorts: at the turn of the millennium, China churned out cheap junk and not much else. Now, though, it is shaping up to be a formidable and sophisticated rival.
The car industry is a prime example. Today, Chinese electric vehicles are among the best and cheapest in the world, posing a menace to domestic production in Germany and the rest of Europe. But this was not always the case. As one post on r/CarTalkUK, a Reddit group with half-a-million users, puts it: “I remember only a few years ago when Top Gear went to China and showed us all those horrific knock-off death trap shit-boxes that looked like mutilated Minis… now those things are seemingly a thing of the past.” The EU is well aware of this development, having just slapped tariffs on Chinese cars that would make Trump blush. And it’s not just cars — China dominates many key markets, including drones, shipbuilding, solar panels, and wind turbine components to name just a few, and is making strides in other areas too.
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SubscribeBasing your energy policy on the PR machine of a teenaged Swedish truant and her soup-chucking acolytes wasn’t a gamble, it was an act of obviously self-destructive idiocy. Economic self-harm.
The West has been pursuing moronic policies on so many fronts for the last ten or more years it’s a miracle there’s anything still working. At least the US had Trump for a while to kind of put the brakes on, but Europe’s political class is populated by fools who can’t tell the difference between a hallucination and a vision, and would lack the courage in any case to pursue either if it ran contrary to monolithic mainstream media narratives of catastrophic climate change.
Well, you reap what you sow. It’s hardly China’s fault. I bet they can hardly believe their luck.
Western prosperity, or what is left of it, has for the last 30 years been based on nothing more than labour arbitrage, either through outsourcing or mass migration. Both are totally unsustainable relying on endless streams of migrants or unlimited numbers of poorer countries to move production to and yet for all the contempt I feel for our political classes, they have simply offered the easiest solutions to our insatiable demands for every growing welfare and consumption. No politician will make hard choices when voters will not accept hard truths.
I don’t get it. In one breath the author is lamenting the high cost of German energy, in the next he’s warning us about the threat China poses to EV production, battery technology and wind and solar manufacturing. Here’s a thought. Ditch net zero and these all become stranded industries. China will be sitting on a mountain of products no one wants. There is no consumer demand for any of this stuff. It’s all driven by govt mandate.
Germany is doing away with itself, they are slowly implementing the Morgenthau plan. SAD