Frank_Lee
Active Member
I think the 19% figure is for Automotive's share of Manufacturing's value added (which is about 25-30% of the German total). The differences between value added and GDP reflect tariffs and subsidies for the most part, which are not order of magnitude factors in general. I suspect the 19% figure is for total turnover (i.e. Revenue) of German industry. The issue with that is that a large fraction of the value added is captured outside Germany in Austria, Hungary, Poland, etc. by automotive suppliers and subsidiaries, as I'm sure you well know.Just to provide some figures: the German automobile sector accounts for 5% of GDP, but represents 19% of gross value added. It has recently promised subsidies worth 902 million Euros (C$1.3 billion) to have a a Swedish battery maker built his plant in Germany and not the US and 9.9 billion Euros (C$14.5 billion) to have Intel build a semiconductor factory in Germany, as well as 5 billion Euros ($7.3 billion) to TSMC to do the same.
In short: Germany, with an Economy approximately twice as large as Canada, is spending about twice as much to host high tech plants…
2020 is the most recent year for which I could find figures at the European statistical office (https://ec.europa.eu/eurostat/databrowser/view/sbs_na_ind_r2__custom_9467276/default/table?lang=en). Using 2019 to avoid the effects of the pandemic, conservatively using category C29, which includes the value added from production of commercial vehicles, I get about 107 billion euros. For manufacturing as a whole (C2) I get 658 billion euros in 2019. 107/658 = 16.2%.




