Germany Becomes the World’s Top Creditor, Overtaking Japan After 34 Years`
In a major shift on the global financial stage, Germany has overtaken Japan as the world’s top creditor country in 2024, ending Japan’s 34-year reign. This change, driven by current account surpluses, exchange rate dynamics, and structural economic trends, reflects broader transformations in global trade and investment patterns.
Germany became the world’s largest net creditor, surpassing Japan for the first time since 1990. Despite Japan reaching record-high net external assets, Germany outpaced it in growth and valuation. Currency fluctuations and trade surpluses played a critical role in this reversal.
Germany’s Surging Current Account Surplus,
Exchange Rate Advantage,
Japan’s Strong but Insufficient Performance,
Germany
Japan
Hope from Domestic Reforms,
| Summary/Static | Details |
| Why in the news? | Germany Becomes the World’s Top Creditor, Overtaking Japan After 34 Years` |
| Japan’s Net External Assets (2024) | ¥533 trillion (~$3.7 trillion), up 13% from 2023 |
| Germany’s Net External Assets | ¥569 trillion (~$3.9 trillion) |
| Key Reason | Euro appreciation, higher current account surplus |
| Japan’s Challenges | Weak yen, cautious investment strategy, ageing population |
| Potential Rebound Factors | Wage hikes, NISA scheme, long-term overseas investments |
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