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Firms bet on know-how to beat tariffs

Cape Argus

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August 07, 2025

WHILE Germany’s big companies groan under the US tariff burden, many small and midsize firms, the backbone of Europe’s top economy, are confident their highly-specialised goods will just keep selling.

The hope is that, in niche areas where American customers have no obvious alternatives, buyers across the Atlantic will just have to accept paying higher prices for their high-tech machines and products.

“The customer in America pays the tariff,” said Thorsten Bauer, co-head of laser maker Xiton Photonics, based in the western city of Kaiserslautern. “We don't notice a thing.”

Bauer's firm of about 20 workers is in this respect typical of the often family-owned enterprises that make up the German “Mittelstand”, Deutsche Bank executive Jan-Philipp Gillmann said.

“German Mittelstand companies are somewhat protected since they are often very specialised, sometimes the only firm that makes a particular part,” said Gillmann, Deutsche Bank’s Head of Corporate Bank Europe.

“The cost of the tariff will often be borne by the consumer.”

Under a framework deal agreed in late July, EU exports are set to face across-the-board US tariffs of 15% from today - higher than traditional duties but much lower than Trump’s threatened 30%.

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