German investments in Russia fell by more than one-third in 2019
German investments in Russia fell by more than a third in 2019 due to persistent European Union (EU) and U.S. sanctions, Russian trade barriers, bureaucratic hurdles as well as other factors.
The German-Russian Chamber of Commerce said on Thursday.

READ ALSO:
German net direct investments in Russia in 2019 amounted to about 2.13 billion euros (2.4 billion dollars), 36 per cent less than the previous year, the chamber said.
A major factor was Russian industry protectionism, hindering foreign businesses from competing with Russian companies on the domestic market, it said.
German businesses have invested the equivalent of 28 billion euros in the Russian economy since the end of the Soviet Union in 1991, according to the chamber of commerce.
“From no other country have so many firms invested in factories in Russia than from Germany,’’ said the chamber’s head, Matthias Schepp.
The majority of German companies are still positive on Russia despite investment barriers, Schepp said.
The EU, the U.S. and other Western powers have imposed crippling sanctions against the Russian economy following Russia’s 2014 annexation of neighbouring Ukraine’s Crimea region.
Russia has followed suit with counter-sanctions against those powers.
Russia’s economy is largely dependent on commodity exports, particularly oil and natural gas, a reliance upon which the country’s rouble currency is vulnerable.
The Russian rouble has lost more than a 10th of its value versus the euro and U.S. dollar over the past week due to an oil price drop connected with falling global trade amid the coronavirus outbreak.


You must be logged in to post a comment.