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Germany Freight Transport Report 2007

Product Type: Market Research Report
Published by: Business Monitor International
Published: January 2007
Product Code: R302-1524
Description
The German government on November 9 started on its last big privatisation after the Christian Democrats
and Social Democrats ended months of haggling and agreed to float state railway Deutsche Bahn (DB) by
2009. Lawmakers ‘agreed to sell the railway without its track’, Wolfgang Tiefensee, transport minister,
said. ‘We may go ahead with a sale of as much as 49% in 2008 or 2009.’ Partial privatisation may attract
new investment into rail freight. More widely, moderate growth appears to be the order of the day for
Europe’s largest economy as its ‘grand coalition’ government, pursues a policy of reforms by consensus,
designed to bring the fiscal deficit under control and to inject greater dynamism into activity levels.
BMI’s newly released Germany Freight Transport Report concludes that freight traffic (measured in
million tons/kilometre, mntkm) will grow at an annual average of 1.3% in 2007-2011. This is a shade
slower than the economy as a whole, which we expect to expand by 1.4% per annum over the same
period. This pattern, where freight growth is a little slower than GDP, is typical of developed economies.
Reforms and structural change will be important issues facing the industry. The pace of change will be
relatively measured, however. Under approved plans, rail freight is expected to take some of the strain off
the roads, through a variety of mechanisms and initiatives including increased reliance on road pricing,
encouragement of inter-modal transport hubs and development of intelligent traffic systems (ITS). BMI
predicts, however, that road haulage will grow by 1.3% per annum and actually increase its share of total
freight traffic to 72%. Rail freight will grow by 1.2% per annum and maintain its share of the total fairly
constant at 16-17%. Among the other modes, sea cargo will grow by 1.6%, supported by Germany’s
strong international trade, while airfreight will expand by 1.7 per annum, thanks to a steady performance
by Deutsche Lufthansa.


The operating environment for transportation companies will evolve favourably, and will set the scene for
a fairly positive period going forward. We score the overall freight industry operating environment at 43
(out of a theoretical total of 70 and above the average for the G-7 economies which stands at 41). That
said, Germany’s regulatory and competitive environments, important components of the overall rating,
still present scope for improvement, given the plethora of taxes and regulations that add to operating
costs. Despite this, the German freight industry can continue to count on world class companies with a
deserved reputation for quality and attention to detail.
Across all modes the scene is set for moderate growth and development. With Germany acting as a key
European manufacturing and trading hub, BMI forecasts that its transport and communications sector will
grow to a value of US$249.9bn by 2011, equivalent to 7.5% of GDP.
Table of Contents
Executive Summary
Chapter 1 - SWOT Analysis
Germany Road Haulage Industry SWOT
Germany Political SWOT
Germany Economics Industry SWOT
Chapter 2 -Business Environment Overview
Business Environment Ranking
Table: G7 Countries Freight Business Environment Ranking
Economics - Long-term Risk
Politics - Long-term Risk
Freight Transport Growth
Transport Infrastructure Growth
Regulatory Environment
Competitive Environment
Transport Intensity Index
Chapter 3 - Industry Trends and Developments
Rail
Air
Sea
Pipelines
Chapter 4 - Industry Forecast Scenario
Macroeconomic Activity
Table: Germany - Macroeconomic Forecasts
Country Snapshot: Germany Demographic
Section 1: Population:
Table: Demographic Indicators (2005)
Table: Rural/Urban Breakdown
Section 2: Education & Healthcare
Table: Education
Table: Healthcare: Vital Statistics
Table: Healthcare: Expenditure
Section 3: Labour Market And Spending Power
Table: Employment Indicators
Table: Consumption and Stratification
Table: Wages per year
Transport Outlook
Table: Freight Carried (domestic and international):
Table: Freight Industry Indicators
Chapter 5 - Trade Environment
Table: Value Of Imports By Category (US$mn)
Table: Value Of Exports By Category (US$mn)
Table: Top Export Destinations (US$mn)
Table: Export Trade, % y-o-y
Table: Top Import Sources (US$mn)
Table: Import Trade, % y-o-y
Chapter 6 - Market Overview
Multi-modal
Infrastructure
Road
Table: Germany - Transport Infrastructure: Vehicles
Rail
Competitive Landscape: Rail
Air
Table: Germany - Airport Traffic Figures For 2005
Infrastructure
Competitive Landscape: Aviation
Company Profiles
Water
Competitive Landscape: Maritime
Pipelines
Competitive Landscape: Pipelines
BMI Forecast Modelling
How We Generate Our Industry Forecasts
Transport Industry
Sources


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