Recovery in Germany runs into credit headwind
By Paul Carrel
BERLIN (Reuters) - News headlines speak of recovery but for Hannes Hesse, managing director of Germany's VDMA engineering association, financing is still a big problem.
"Conditions are beyond difficult," he says.
The VDMA, whose members include Siemens and Volkswagen, says its incoming business has suffered record declines this year. Now the dearth of credit to tide firms over is a new headache, which frustrated policymakers are blaming on reluctant banks.
A poll in the July 6 edition of business weekly WirtschaftsWoche found some 57 percent of companies surveyed in June were feeling a credit crunch.
In March, only five percent had reported having such difficulty accessing credit.
The frustration stems partly from the fact that late last month the European Central Bank poured 442 billion euros (383 billion pounds) of low-interest one-year funds into money markets -- its biggest ever injection -- that is not trickling down to entrepreneurs.
"It's a euro area-wide problem and therefore this question of a credit crunch is a big issue for the ECB," said Juergen Michels, euro area economist at Citigroup. "It's a big, big headwind for the recovery."
Even though the problem is generating protest from policymakers including European Central Bank President Jean-Claude Trichet and German Finance Minister Peer Steinbrueck, with bankers hoarding cash there is so far little agreement on how best to increase lending flows. Continued...


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