Iran War Hurts German Economy and Business Feelings

A2

Iran War Hurts German Economy and Business Feelings

Introduction

There is a war in the Middle East with Iran. This war is hurting Germany''s economy. Germany is the biggest economy in Europe. New numbers show that business people feel less confident. The German government now says the economy will grow less. Prices will go up more.

Main Body

The Ifo Institute said on Friday that its business climate index fell to 84.4 in April. It was 86.3 in March. This is the lowest number since May 2020. Business people feel worse about the present and the future. The head of Ifo said the Iran crisis hurts the German economy. Another survey also showed a big drop in business feelings. The German government lowered its growth forecast for 2026 from 1.0% to 0.5%. It also raised its inflation forecast to 2.7% for 2026. The government said higher energy costs and less demand from other countries are the reasons. The economy minister said the government gave tax relief on petrol and diesel for two months. This costs about 1.6 billion euros. Analysts said the war shows Germany depends too much on energy from other countries. Higher energy prices take money away from important reforms. The war also stops supplies of oil, gas, and other products for factories. This can cause production to stop. Germany gets about 6% of its energy from the Middle East. The government has a big spending plan of 500 billion euros for roads, digital, and energy. It also plans to spend more on defense. One economist said the spending plan helps, but higher energy costs will use some of that money. Another economist said the growth downgrade does not change the spending plan much. He expects only a small part of the money to go to higher energy costs. He thinks spending will increase later this year. Some economists said Germany needs a better energy plan to be more independent and have lower prices.

Conclusion

The Iran war hurt German business feelings and growth plans. Business confidence is as low as during the pandemic. The government''s big spending helps a little. But higher energy costs and supply problems slow the recovery. Germany needs to change its energy plan and make big reforms.

Vocabulary Learning

economy
the system of money, jobs, and business in a country經濟
Example:Germany's economy is the biggest in Europe.
energy
power that comes from oil, gas, electricity, etc.能源
Example:Higher energy costs slow the recovery.
government
the group of people who make decisions for a country政府
Example:The German government lowered its growth forecast.
prices
the amount of money you pay for something價格
Example:Prices will go up more because of the war.
war
a fight between countries or groups戰爭
Example:The war in the Middle East hurts the German economy.

Sentence Learning

There is a war in the Middle East with Iran.
This sentence uses 'There is' to show something exists.本句使用'There is'表示存在某事物。
This war is hurting Germany's economy.
This sentence uses the present continuous tense 'is hurting' to show an action happening now.本句使用现在进行时'is hurting'表示正在发生的动作。
Business people feel less confident.
This sentence uses the simple present tense 'feel' to describe a general state.本句使用一般现在时'feel'描述一般状态。
The German government lowered its growth forecast for 2026 from 1.0% to 0.5%.
This sentence uses the past tense 'lowered' to talk about a completed action.本句使用过去时'lowered'谈论已完成的动作。
Higher energy prices take money away from important reforms.
This sentence uses the simple present tense 'take' to state a fact.本句使用一般现在时'take'陈述事实。
B2

Iran Conflict Weakens German Economic Outlook as Business Confidence Falls to Pandemic-Era Low

Introduction

The ongoing conflict in the Middle East, especially the war involving Iran, has significantly weakened economic prospects for Germany, Europe''s largest economy. Recent data show a sharp drop in business confidence, and the federal government has lowered its growth forecasts while raising inflation expectations.

Main Body

The Ifo Institute for Economic Research reported that its business climate index fell to 84.4 in April, down from 86.3 in March. This was the lowest level since May 2020 during the early COVID-19 pandemic. The decline was worse than market expectations, which had predicted 85.7. Both current assessments and forward expectations decreased. Ifo President Clemens Fuest stated that the German economy is being severely affected by the Iran crisis. Klaus Wohlrabe, head of surveys at Ifo, noted that sentiment weakened across all sectors, indicating a loss of confidence. Furthermore, the ZEW Indicator of Economic Sentiment dropped by 16 points to -17.2 in April, its lowest since December 2022, reflecting rapidly deepening pessimism. The Federal Ministry for Economic Affairs and Energy reduced its growth forecast for 2026 from 1.0% to 0.5%, and for 2027 from 1.3% to 0.9%. It raised inflation projections to 2.7% for 2026 and 2.8% for 2027. The ministry attributed the downgrade to higher energy costs and weaker external demand. Economy Minister Katherina Reiche acknowledged that the fuel relief and other measures would not solve the underlying structural issues behind Germany''s weak growth. She emphasized the need for a competitive economy and far-reaching structural reforms. To mitigate the energy price shock—Brent crude prices have risen about 73% year-to-date—the coalition government approved a two-month tax relief on petrol and diesel worth about €1.6 billion. Reiche stated that the government acted quickly to ease rising fuel costs. However, analysts expressed caution. Carsten Brzeski, global head of macro research at ING, noted that the war highlights Germany''s heavy dependence on energy imports and that shifting dependencies from Russia to the Middle East is not a structural solution. He added that higher energy prices are diverting government focus from overdue structural reforms toward short-term support, which he described as an unpromising strategy. Fuest pointed out that the conflict disrupts not only oil and gas supplies but also intermediate products for the chemical and construction industries, posing a risk of bottlenecks that could halt production. Germany remains a major net energy importer, with about 6% of its energy coming from the Middle East, according to ING analysis. Energy-intensive industries, employing nearly one million people, account for roughly 17% of industrial gross value added. Market observers had expected that Germany''s large fiscal stimulus package—including a €500 billion infrastructure fund for transport, digital, and energy, plus increased defense spending beyond the historic 1% of GDP limit—would boost the economy. Fuest stated that the fiscal expansion remains a tailwind and is now even more welcome, noting that without it the German economy would be shrinking. Defense is one sector continuing to grow due to rising orders. Brzeski indicated that the €200 billion-plus earmarked for infrastructure and defense is still on track, but some funds will likely be absorbed by higher energy prices and supply chain frictions, slowing progress. He concluded that the war is painfully delaying the German recovery but not yet derailing it. Niklas Garnadt, German economist at Goldman Sachs, assessed that the growth downgrade does not meaningfully affect spending from the fiscal package. Under a baseline for energy prices, he expects fiscal measures worth about 0.1% of GDP (€4–5 billion) to be directed toward higher energy costs this year and next, but these should not replace the package''s spending. He does not anticipate substantial additional measures beyond the fuel tax break and tax benefits for one-off inflation bonuses (worth about €3 billion), and expects stronger spending in the second half of the year aligned with historical patterns and continued ramp-up of infrastructure and defense outlays. Brzeski further argued that Germany urgently needs a better and more committed energy strategy ensuring more autonomy and competitive prices, whether through renewables or rethinking nuclear, and that the government must finally produce a long-term strategy.

Conclusion

The Iran conflict has caused a serious drop in German economic sentiment and growth expectations, with business confidence falling to levels not seen since the pandemic. While the government''s fiscal stimulus package provides a buffer, higher energy costs and supply chain disruptions are delaying the recovery. Structural reforms and a coherent long-term energy strategy remain critical to addressing the underlying weaknesses exposed by the crisis.

Vocabulary Learning

business confidence
The level of optimism or pessimism that business managers feel about the prospects of their companies and the economy.商業信心
Example:Recent data show a sharp drop in business confidence, and the federal government has lowered its growth forecasts while raising inflation expectations.
fiscal stimulus package
Government measures, such as increased spending or tax cuts, intended to boost economic activity.財政刺激方案
Example:The government's fiscal stimulus package provides a buffer, but higher energy costs and supply chain disruptions are delaying the recovery.
growth forecasts
Predictions about the future growth of an economy, typically measured by GDP.增長預測
Example:The Federal Ministry for Economic Affairs and Energy reduced its growth forecast for 2026 from 1.0% to 0.5%.
structural reforms
Changes to the fundamental policies and institutions of an economy to improve its efficiency and competitiveness.結構性改革
Example:She emphasized the need for a competitive economy and far-reaching structural reforms.
supply chain disruptions
Interruptions in the flow of goods and materials from suppliers to manufacturers or consumers.供應鏈中斷
Example:Higher energy costs and supply chain disruptions are delaying the recovery.

Sentence Learning

The decline was worse than market expectations, which had predicted 85.7.
This sentence uses a non-defining relative clause introduced by 'which' to add extra information about 'market expectations'. It helps clarify what the expectations were.這個句子使用了由 'which' 引導的非限制性關係從句,為 'market expectations' 補充額外資訊,有助於說明預期的具體數值。
Ifo President Clemens Fuest stated that the German economy is being severely affected by the Iran crisis.
This sentence uses the passive voice ('is being severely affected') to focus on the economy rather than the agent. It is common in formal reporting to emphasize the action or result.這個句子使用了被動語態('is being severely affected'),將重點放在經濟而非動作執行者上。這是正式報導中常見的用法,用以強調動作或結果。
Furthermore, the ZEW Indicator of Economic Sentiment dropped by 16 points to -17.2 in April, its lowest since December 2022, reflecting rapidly deepening pessimism.
The linking word 'Furthermore' adds additional information, and the present participle 'reflecting' explains the result of the drop. This structure helps show cause and effect clearly.連接詞 'Furthermore' 用於補充額外資訊,而現在分詞 'reflecting' 則解釋了下跌的結果。這種結構有助於清晰地展示因果關係。
He added that higher energy prices are diverting government focus from overdue structural reforms toward short-term support, which he described as an unpromising strategy.
This sentence uses a relative clause ('which he described as') to provide the speaker's evaluation of the situation. It combines reported speech with a defining relative clause for clarity.這個句子使用了關係從句('which he described as')來提供說話者對情況的評價。它結合了轉述語句和限定性關係從句,使表達更清晰。
While the government's fiscal stimulus package provides a buffer, higher energy costs and supply chain disruptions are delaying the recovery.
The linking word 'While' introduces a contrast between the positive effect of the stimulus package and the negative impact of energy costs and disruptions. This structure organizes contrasting ideas effectively.連接詞 'While' 引出了刺激方案的正面效果與能源成本及中斷的負面影響之間的對比。這種結構有效地組織了對比觀點。
C2

Iran Conflict Dims German Economic Outlook as Business Sentiment Falls to Pandemic-Era Low

Introduction

The ongoing conflict in the Middle East, specifically the war involving Iran, has significantly dampened economic prospects for Germany, Europe''s largest economy. Recent data indicate a sharp decline in business confidence, and the federal government has revised its growth forecasts downward while raising inflation expectations.

Main Body

The Ifo Institute for Economic Research reported on Friday that its business climate index fell to 84.4 in April, down from 86.3 in March, marking the lowest reading since May 2020 during the early phase of the COVID-19 pandemic. This decline exceeded market expectations, which had anticipated a figure of 85.7. The index''s components showed a deterioration in both current assessments (from 86.7 to 85.4) and forward expectations (from 85.9 to 83.3). Ifo President Clemens Fuest stated that the German economy is being severely affected by the Iran crisis, and Klaus Wohlrabe, head of surveys at Ifo, noted that sentiment weakened across all sectors, indicating a loss of confidence. Separately, the ZEW Indicator of Economic Sentiment fell by 16 points to -17.2 in April, its lowest since December 2022, following a sharp drop from +58.3 in February to -0.5 in March, reflecting rapidly deepening pessimism. The Federal Ministry for Economic Affairs and Energy this week reduced its growth forecast for 2026 from 1.0% to 0.5%, and for 2027 from 1.3% to 0.9%. Inflation projections were raised to 2.7% for 2026 and 2.8% for 2027. The ministry attributed the downgrade to higher energy costs and weaker external demand. Economy Minister Katherina Reiche acknowledged that the fuel relief and other measures would not resolve the underlying structural issues behind Germany''s weak growth, emphasizing the need for a competitive economy and far-reaching structural reforms. To mitigate the energy price shock—Brent crude prices have risen approximately 73% year-to-date—the coalition government approved a two-month tax relief on petrol and diesel worth about €1.6 billion. Reiche stated that the government acted quickly to alleviate rising fuel costs. However, analysts have expressed caution. Carsten Brzeski, global head of macro research at ING, noted that the war underscores Germany''s heavy dependence on energy imports and that shifting dependencies from Russia to the Middle East is not a structural solution. He added that higher energy prices are diverting government focus from overdue structural reforms toward short-term support, which he described as an unpromising strategy. Fuest pointed out that the conflict disrupts not only oil and gas supplies but also intermediate products for the chemical and construction industries, posing a risk of bottlenecks that could halt production. Germany remains a major net energy importer, with about 6% of its energy coming from the Middle East, according to ING analysis. Energy-intensive industries, employing nearly one million people, account for roughly 17% of industrial gross value added. Market observers had anticipated that Germany''s large fiscal stimulus package—including a €500 billion infrastructure fund for transport, digital, and energy, plus increased defense spending beyond the historic 1% of GDP limit—would boost the economy. Fuest stated that the fiscal expansion remains a tailwind and is now even more welcome, noting that without it the German economy would be shrinking. Defense is one sector continuing to grow due to rising orders. Brzeski indicated that the €200 billion-plus earmarked for infrastructure and defense is still on track, but some funds will likely be absorbed by higher energy prices and supply chain frictions, slowing progress. He concluded that the war is painfully delaying the German recovery but not yet derailing it. Niklas Garnadt, German economist at Goldman Sachs, assessed that the growth downgrade does not meaningfully affect spending from the fiscal package. Under a baseline for energy prices, he expects fiscal measures worth about 0.1% of GDP (€4–5 billion) to be directed toward higher energy costs this year and next, but these should not replace the package''s spending. He does not anticipate substantial additional measures beyond the fuel tax break and tax benefits for one-off inflation bonuses (worth about €3 billion), and expects stronger spending in the second half of the year aligned with historical patterns and continued ramp-up of infrastructure and defense outlays. Brzeski further argued that Germany urgently needs a better and more committed energy strategy ensuring more autonomy and competitive prices, whether through renewables or rethinking nuclear, and that the government must finally produce a long-term strategy.

Conclusion

The Iran conflict has inflicted a severe blow to German economic sentiment and growth expectations, with business confidence falling to levels not seen since the pandemic. While the government''s fiscal stimulus package provides a buffer, higher energy costs and supply chain disruptions are delaying the recovery. Structural reforms and a coherent long-term energy strategy remain critical to addressing the underlying vulnerabilities exposed by the crisis.

Vocabulary Learning

bottlenecks
Points of congestion or blockage that slow or halt the flow of goods, production, or processes.瓶頸;生產或供應流程中的堵塞點
Example:The conflict poses a risk of bottlenecks that could halt production in the chemical and construction industries.
derailing
Causing something to leave its intended course or path; obstructing or diverting progress.使脫軌;阻礙或偏離原定進程
Example:Brzeski concluded that the war is painfully delaying the German recovery but not yet derailing it.
deterioration
The process of becoming progressively worse; a decline in quality, condition, or value.惡化;變壞的過程
Example:The index's components showed a deterioration in both current assessments and forward expectations.
mitigate
To make less severe, serious, or painful; to alleviate or reduce the impact of something.減輕;緩和
Example:To mitigate the energy price shock, the coalition government approved a two-month tax relief on petrol and diesel.
tailwind
A wind blowing in the direction of travel; used metaphorically to describe a favorable factor or condition that aids progress.順風;比喻有利因素
Example:Fuest stated that the fiscal expansion remains a tailwind and is now even more welcome.

Sentence Learning

The Ifo Institute for Economic Research reported on Friday that its business climate index fell to 84.4 in April, down from 86.3 in March, marking the lowest reading since May 2020 during the early phase of the COVID-19 pandemic.
Main clause: 'The Ifo Institute... reported on Friday'. Subordinate noun clause: 'that its business climate index fell to 84.4 in April'. Reduced relative clause: 'down from 86.3 in March' (elliptical). Participial phrase: 'marking the lowest reading since May 2020...' acting as a resultative modifier. The sentence exhibits high lexical density with precise figures and temporal references.主要子句:「The Ifo Institute... reported on Friday」。從屬名詞子句:「that its business climate index fell to 84.4 in April」。省略關係子句:「down from 86.3 in March」(省略結構)。分詞片語:「marking the lowest reading since May 2020...」作為結果修飾語。句子具有高詞彙密度,包含精確數字和時間參考。
Klaus Wohlrabe, head of surveys at Ifo, noted that sentiment weakened across all sectors, indicating a loss of confidence.
Main clause: 'Klaus Wohlrabe... noted'. Appositive noun phrase: 'head of surveys at Ifo' providing additional identification. Subordinate noun clause: 'that sentiment weakened across all sectors'. Participial phrase: 'indicating a loss of confidence' functioning as an adverbial of result. The structure uses apposition and a non-finite clause to condense information.主要子句:「Klaus Wohlrabe... noted」。同位語名詞片語:「head of surveys at Ifo」提供額外識別。從屬名詞子句:「that sentiment weakened across all sectors」。分詞片語:「indicating a loss of confidence」作為結果狀語。結構使用同位語和非限定子句濃縮信息。
He added that higher energy prices are diverting government focus from overdue structural reforms toward short-term support, which he described as an unpromising strategy.
Main clause: 'He added'. Subordinate noun clause: 'that higher energy prices are diverting government focus from overdue structural reforms toward short-term support'. Within this clause, the verb 'are diverting' takes a complex prepositional phrase 'from... toward...'. Relative clause: 'which he described as an unpromising strategy' modifying 'short-term support'. The sentence features a non-restrictive relative clause and a complex verb complement structure.主要子句:「He added」。從屬名詞子句:「that higher energy prices are diverting government focus from overdue structural reforms toward short-term support」。該子句中,動詞「are diverting」帶有複雜介詞片語「from... toward...」。關係子句:「which he described as an unpromising strategy」修飾「short-term support」。句子包含非限制性關係子句和複雜動詞補足結構。
Fuest stated that the fiscal expansion remains a tailwind and is now even more welcome, noting that without it the German economy would be shrinking.
Main clause: 'Fuest stated'. Subordinate noun clause: 'that the fiscal expansion remains a tailwind and is now even more welcome'. Participial phrase: 'noting that without it the German economy would be shrinking' – this contains a conditional subjunctive clause 'without it... would be shrinking' (present unreal conditional). The participial phrase adds a supplementary observation with a hypothetical scenario.主要子句:「Fuest stated」。從屬名詞子句:「that the fiscal expansion remains a tailwind and is now even more welcome」。分詞片語:「noting that without it the German economy would be shrinking」——其中包含條件虛擬語氣子句「without it... would be shrinking」(現在非真實條件句)。分詞片語以假設情境補充說明。
Brzeski further argued that Germany urgently needs a better and more committed energy strategy ensuring more autonomy and competitive prices, whether through renewables or rethinking nuclear, and that the government must finally produce a long-term strategy.
Main clause: 'Brzeski further argued'. Two parallel subordinate noun clauses: 'that Germany urgently needs a better and more committed energy strategy ensuring more autonomy and competitive prices, whether through renewables or rethinking nuclear' and 'that the government must finally produce a long-term strategy'. The first clause contains a participial phrase 'ensuring...' and a 'whether... or...' correlative conjunction. The sentence demonstrates parallelism and complex nominalization.主要子句:「Brzeski further argued」。兩個並列從屬名詞子句:「that Germany urgently needs a better and more committed energy strategy ensuring more autonomy and competitive prices, whether through renewables or rethinking nuclear」以及「that the government must finally produce a long-term strategy」。第一個子句包含分詞片語「ensuring...」和「whether... or...」相關連詞。句子展現並列結構和複雜名詞化。