An influential panel of top economic advisors to the German government downgraded its 2013 growth forecast for the country Monday, saying Europe's top economy would only expand 0.3 percent. Last November the panel, known as Germany's "Five Wise Men", had predicted an already very sluggish growth rate of 0.8 percent for this year and next, and blamed a recent downturn and shrinking demand from abroad. "The decline of 0.5 percentage points compared to the forecast in November 2012 is a result above all of the significant decline in the gross national product in the fourth quarter of 2012," the group said in a statement. "Drivers of growth in 2013 are only expected from inside the country." The German government has predicted 0.4 percent growth this year after slowing down to 0.7 percent in 2012. The advisors said that a healthy job market would continue to lead to "robust development" of private household consumption but that investment by industry would be slack at least in the first half. It held to its previous forecast that average annual unemployment would rise slightly to 6.9 percent. Meanwhile exports, the traditional motor of the German economy, will dip on average over the course of 2013, weighed down by the crippling eurozone debt crisis and recession in its most important export market, the European Union. Unlike most of its neighbours, Germany has been spared the worst of the long-running debt crisis thanks to deep and painful structural reforms implemented over the last decade. It clocked up growth of 4.2 percent in 2010 and 3.0 percent in 2011.
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