What would happen if Germany ceased car production?

What would happen if Germany ceased car production?

What if Germany stopped making cars?

“THE⁤ FUTURE of the VW brand is at stake.” When Thomas Schäfer,‍ the mass-market marque’s newish​ boss, gave a presentation to his management team in early July, he did not sugarcoat its problems. ‌High costs, falling demand, growing competition—the list goes on. “The roof is on​ fire,” he warned,⁤ echoing one ⁤of the most noted alarm calls in recent ⁤business history—from Stephen Elop, who in 2011 compared his company⁤ to a ⁣“burning platform” shortly after taking​ the​ helm at‌ Nokia, then the world’s largest maker of​ mobile phones.

In the case of Nokia, ⁣the wake-up ⁤call did not help. A few years later the ⁢firm was dismantled and its mobile-phone business sold to Microsoft, which has⁤ since closed it down. Could mighty VW, ⁤its mightier parent group,‌ which owns nine other brands, or even Germany’s mightiest industry ⁢as a whole really suffer ⁣a similar fate? And if it did, what would that mean for Europe’s‌ biggest economy?

An imminent implosion⁢ of the car industry seems‍ unlikely. In 2022 Volkswagen was the world’s largest carmaker by revenue, giving it plenty of cash ‌to support its biggest brand. On July 27th it⁤ reported that sales rose‍ by a‌ healthy 18% in the ⁢first half of 2023,⁢ year on year, to €156bn ($174bn). BMW and Mercedes-Benz, Germany’s two other big automotive concerns, are ‍in decent ⁢nick.

2023-07-31 15:12:03
Original from www.economist.com
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