Skip to main navigation Skip to main content Skip to page footer

Journal Article

The Power of Substitution: The Great German Gas Debate in Retrospect

Authors

  • Moll
  • B.
  • Schularick
  • M.
  • Zachmann
  • G.

Publication Date

DOI

keindoi

Key Words

Energy

Gas Supply

Industrial Production

Related Topics

International Trade

Economic & Financial Crises

Companies

Russia

Germany

Economic Policy in Germany

War

Ukraine

The Russian attack on Ukraine in February 2022 laid bare Germany’s dependence on Russian energy imports and ignited a heated debate on the costs of a cut-off from Russian gas. While one side predicted economic collapse, the other side (ours) predicted “substantial but manageable” economic costs due to households and firms adapting to the shock. Using the empirical evidence now at hand, this paper studies the adjustment of the German economy after Russia weaponized gas exports by cutting Germany off from gas supplies in the summer of 2022. We document two key margins of adjustment. First, Germany was able to replace substantial amounts of Russian gas with imports from third countries underscoring the insurance provided by openness to international trade. Second, the German economy reduced gas consumption by about 20%. The economic costs of demand reduction were manageable with the economy as a whole only experiencing a technical mini-recession in the winter of 2022/23. Overall industrial production “de-coupled” from production in energy-intensive sectors (which did see large drops) and declined only slightly. We draw a number of key lessons from this important case study about the insurance offered by access to global markets and the power of substitution, specifically that supply shocks have dramatically smaller costs when elasticities of substitution are very low (but non-zero) compared to a truly zero elasticity.

Kiel Institute Expert

  • Prof. Dr. Moritz Schularick
    President

More Publications

Subject Dossiers

  • Two women inspect a solar panel

    Climate and Energy

  • Production site fully automatic with robot arms

    Economic Outlook

  • Inside shoot of the cupola of the Reichstag, the building of the German Bundestag.

    Economic Policy in Germany

Research Center

  • Macroeconomics