Chronic Lack of Investment — a German Disease

Abstract No country in the EU-28 invests less in public infrastructure than Germany. On average among EU members, investment in roads, schools and other public investment has been 3.7% of GDP since 2000. In Germany, public investment was significantly lower with 2.1% of GDP on average. This German i...

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Main Authors: Felix Rösel, Julia Wolffson
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: Sciendo 2022-07-01
Series:Wirtschaftsdienst
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1007/s10273-022-3226-0
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author Felix Rösel
Julia Wolffson
author_facet Felix Rösel
Julia Wolffson
author_sort Felix Rösel
collection DOAJ
description Abstract No country in the EU-28 invests less in public infrastructure than Germany. On average among EU members, investment in roads, schools and other public investment has been 3.7% of GDP since 2000. In Germany, public investment was significantly lower with 2.1% of GDP on average. This German investment gap of more than one percentage point persists when controlling for various economic, fiscal, demographic and institutional factors in regression analyses. Germany’s lack of public investment seems to have become a chronic disease that is rooted in endless planning procedures and significant staff shortages. However, considering the increasing labour and material shortages, it might almost be too late to cure the illness.
format Article
id doaj-art-0e1050f678554aa0b3d06d8d3ca50bf9
institution Kabale University
issn 1613-978X
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publishDate 2022-07-01
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series Wirtschaftsdienst
spelling doaj-art-0e1050f678554aa0b3d06d8d3ca50bf92025-02-02T06:27:35ZdeuSciendoWirtschaftsdienst1613-978X2022-07-01102744544910.1007/s10273-022-3226-0Chronic Lack of Investment — a German DiseaseFelix Rösel0Julia Wolffson1Institut für VolkswirtschaftslehreInstitut für VolkswirtschaftslehreAbstract No country in the EU-28 invests less in public infrastructure than Germany. On average among EU members, investment in roads, schools and other public investment has been 3.7% of GDP since 2000. In Germany, public investment was significantly lower with 2.1% of GDP on average. This German investment gap of more than one percentage point persists when controlling for various economic, fiscal, demographic and institutional factors in regression analyses. Germany’s lack of public investment seems to have become a chronic disease that is rooted in endless planning procedures and significant staff shortages. However, considering the increasing labour and material shortages, it might almost be too late to cure the illness.https://doi.org/10.1007/s10273-022-3226-0
spellingShingle Felix Rösel
Julia Wolffson
Chronic Lack of Investment — a German Disease
Wirtschaftsdienst
title Chronic Lack of Investment — a German Disease
title_full Chronic Lack of Investment — a German Disease
title_fullStr Chronic Lack of Investment — a German Disease
title_full_unstemmed Chronic Lack of Investment — a German Disease
title_short Chronic Lack of Investment — a German Disease
title_sort chronic lack of investment a german disease
url https://doi.org/10.1007/s10273-022-3226-0
work_keys_str_mv AT felixrosel chroniclackofinvestmentagermandisease
AT juliawolffson chroniclackofinvestmentagermandisease