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Germany's Macroeconomic Drivers Through the COVID-19 Pandemic and Recovery Period

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Hohberger, S.

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Crawford School of Public Policy, The Australian National University

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This paper estimates a three-region structural macroeconomic model to analyse the main drivers of GDP, inflation, and wage growth through the COVID-19 pandemic and recovery period in Germany. By incorporating COVID-related shocks, trade in commodities, and endogenous ELB periods, the estimation results suggest: (i) the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020-21 was mainly driven by domestic and foreign lockdown shocks (demand-driven), (ii) the inflation surge in 2021-22 was characterised by an increase in commodity prices, a recovery of global demand, and pronounced supply-side factors, and (iii) wage growth per hour was counterbalanced by competing demand and supply-side effects. Key estimated shocks in the model closely match off-model indicators, supporting its empirical plausibility.

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Centre for Applied Macroeconomic Analysis Working Papers

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