BERLIN, Jan 14 (Reuters) - The German economy failed to
return to its pre-pandemic size in 2021 as microchip shortages
hit production in the car industry and further COVID-19
restrictions slowed down the recovery of Europe's largest
economy in the final months of the year.
Gross domestic product grew 2.7% in 2021 after plunging 4.6%
in the first coronavirus crisis year 2020, preliminary figures
from the Federal Statistics Office showed on Friday.
The figures, which were in line with analysts' forecasts in
a Reuters poll, mean that Germany's economic output was still
some 2% below the pre-crisis 2019 level, the office said.
The world's fourth-biggest economy shrank in the final three
months of 2021 after growing in the previous two quarters as
resurgent coronavirus infections led to renewed restrictions in
retail and hospitality, the office said.
An early estimate pointed to a fourth-quarter contraction
between 0.5% and 1.0% quarter-on-quarter, a spokesperson added.
The main growth drivers in 2021 were a jump in exports and
massive public spending to cushion the impact of the pandemic,
the office said.
However, the development and domestic production of a
groundbreaking COVID-19 vaccine by German start-up BioNTech
also boosted growth considerably, a statistics office
spokesman said, without quantifying the impact.
Economic institutes have estimated that BioNTech alone added
0.5% to Germany's economic output last year, which would account
for nearly a fifth of the overall expansion.
"I can't think of another single German company that has
ever contributed so much to overall economic growth," said
Sebastian Dullien from the macroeconomic policy institute IMK.
Germany increased net new borrowing to a record 215 billion
euros ($245.87 billion) last year following an unprecedented sum
of 130 billion euros in 2020 to fund the fight against COVID.
The public sector deficit of all state levels rose to 153.9
billion euros or 4.3% of economic output.
The economy ministry said in its monthly report that ongoing
supply bottlenecks for important primary products in
manufacturing were likely to persist for a while.
Most economists expect the German economy to shrink again in
the first three months of 2022, driving it into another
technical recession, defined as two consecutive quarters of
contraction, after the economy shrank in the first two quarters
of 2020.
($1 = 0.8744 euros)
(Reporting by Michael Nienaber and Miranda Murray
Additional reporting by Riham Alkousaa and Rene Wagner
Editing by Zuzanna Szymanska, Frank Jack Daniel and Tomasz
Janowski)