Ireland Revises Q1 GDP Down, Germany’s Exports Slide on U.S. Tariff Shifts

Ireland Revises Q1 GDP Down, Germany’s Exports Slide on U.S. Tariff Shifts

Ireland’s CSO sharply revised Q1 GDP growth on July 8: annual expansion was cut to 7.4% from 9.7%, as surging U.S. pharmaceutical exports faded. The more indicative Modified Domestic Demand (MDD) was revised up to 2.0% from 0.8%, though 2024 full-year MDD growth was trimmed to 1.8% from 2.7%. GNI*, stripping multinationals’ distortions, showed 4.8% 2024 growth, highlighting GDP’s skew from cross-border capital flows.

 

Germany’s May exports dropped 1.4% month-on-month (vs. -0.2% expected), with U.S. shipments falling 7.7% after April’s 10.5% plunge. ING attributed this to reversed "pre-tariff rush"—firms frontloaded exports to avoid April’s 10% U.S. tariffs—rather than direct tariff hits. Commerzbank warned U.S. exports may keep shrinking if no EU-U.S. deal is reached by July 9 (seen as unlikely). Germany’s trade surplus rose to €18.4 billion as imports fell faster (-3.8%).

 

The data reflects divergent euro zone economic undercurrents: Ireland’s revisions reveal underlying domestic strength beyond volatile GDP, while Germany’s export slump underscores vulnerability to transatlantic trade policy shifts, with tariff-related timing effects complicating near-term trends.