BERLIN, Feb 5 (Reuters) - German companies gave the government's economic policy a poor report card, the Ifo Institute said on Thursday, with businesses demanding less bureaucracy and tax reforms as top priorities.
Firms awarded an average grade of 4.2 for the government's economic policy, a survey by Ifo showed. In Germany's school grading system, 1 is the best and 6 the worst.
“Companies currently see hardly any progress on key economic policy issues,” said Klaus Wohlrabe, head of surveys at Ifo. “The verdict is accordingly negative.”
Social and pension policy received the weakest rating at 4.6, Ifo said.
Companies graded labour market, industrial, energy and climate policy between 4.1 and 4.2, while fiscal policy as well as infrastructure and digitalisation scored slightly better at 4.0.
The criticism was broadly shared across sectors, Ifo said, with average grades in industry and services ranging from 3.8 to 4.5. No sector rated the government's economic policy as "good" on average, and even the best results were only in the "satisfactory" range, shading toward "sufficient", it added.
Asked where policymakers should focus, 40.4% of companies cited cutting bureaucracy and regulation as the top priority, Ifo said.
Tax and duty reforms followed at 37.1%, while 24.6% pointed to the labour market and skilled workers and 23.3% to energy policy.
Reporting by Maria Martinez Editing by Ludwig Burger
Source: Reuters