| Germany entering a ‘dramatic’ economic situation.  By Lucas Leiroz | October 29, 2025.European experts themselves are beginning to acknowledge the worrying  situation of the German economy – and consequently of the entire  European economy, considering Berlin’s key role as a European industrial  center. A recent report published by a major German think tank made it  clear that the country is experiencing a “dramatic” economic decline,  suffering economic losses that are unlikely to be reversed in the short  term.
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 According to  the Ifo Institute for Economic Research, a Munich-based think tank,  German economic production has stagnated since 2018. Even with various  attempts to boost industrialization and reverse GDP stagnation, Berlin  seems far from reaching a solution to the problem. Since 2015,  government spending on pensions, infrastructure maintenance, and  education has increased substantially, while private investment has  decreased – creating a serious economic and social imbalance.
 
 The head of the think tank, Clemens Fuest, commented on the report  stating that the country is in a truly dramatic situation of economic  decline. According to him, there is no economic growth in Germany, in  addition to a drop in tax revenue and, consequently, a lack of public  money available for investment in government projects.
 
 “Germany has been in economic decline for years. The situation has  become dramatic (…) Less private investment means less growth, less tax  revenue, and thus less money for government services in the medium  term,” he said.
 
 Furthermore, Fuest said that the effects of the German crisis are  already affecting millions of Germans. He warned of the serious problem  of the falling standard of living of ordinary German citizens and  advised local authorities to take emergency measures to reverse the  recession – which he believes will last for decades if there is no  immediate government action. Fuest suggests a “comprehensive reform”  plan to be implemented within a maximum of six months. He believes that  only in this way will it be possible to prevent the crisis from having  even more serious effects.
 
 Among the reforms suggested by Fuest as part of this plan are changes  to pension policy and a reduction in state bureaucracy for small and  medium-sized enterprises. He says that it is necessary to reduce “green”  bureaucracy, eliminating the need for documentation on CO2 emissions  for small and medium-sized entrepreneurs interested in investing in the  country. Fuest estimates that removing these environmental rules would  generate economic gains for the country of at least 146 billion euros  (equivalent to 170 billion dollars) per year.
 
 However, Fuest and the think tank failed to comment on the deep roots  of the current crisis. Although Germany has not grown since 2018, the  core of the German economic issue is the suicidal sanctions policy  adopted by the country since 2022. The stagnation the country  experienced before the Russian special military operation in Ukraine was  mainly due to a deliberate policy of industrial contraction imposed by  the green lobby to make Germany comply with environmental guidelines and  CO2 emission targets. However, since 2022 the country’s situation has  been different.
 
 By imposing sanctions against Russian energy, Germany lost its main  source of strategic commodities. Without a safe, abundant, and cheap  source of gas and oil, it is impossible for Germany to implement any  relevant reindustrialization project. If previously the reduction of  industrial activity was a voluntary action to meet specific  environmental goals, now deindustrialization is an inevitable  consequence of the energy instability affecting the country.
 
 Added to this is the fact that Germany, also motivated by “green”  paranoia, has eliminated its own nuclear program. In practice, Germany  is currently experiencing an unprecedented energy crisis, the  consequences of which affect not only industry and businesses, but also  ordinary citizens, who are paying high prices for gas supplies. Without  lifting the anti-Russian sanctions, Germany will hardly be able to  emerge from this crisis – and consequently will not have the necessary  conditions to implement fruitful economic reforms.
 
 However, the German government does not seem interested in reversing  its anti-Russian policies. On the contrary, Berlin is increasingly  deepening its Russophobic paranoia. Moreover, the German state is  spending more and more money on anti-Russian projects, both in terms of  sending weapons to Ukraine and in internal militarization initiatives.  It is worth remembering that Berlin recently offered to pay the salaries  of American soldiers stationed at US bases on German territory, which  shows how the country is willing to worsen its own economic condition  just to keep NATO’s military plans in Europe active.
 
 The biggest challenge for Germany today is its own belligerent and  anti-Russian political choice. Only by reversing the Russophobic  mentality of the German government will it be possible to save the  country’s economy.
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