European
Markets
Budget crisis shakes industry's confidence in
Germany
By
Christoph Steitz and Tom Käckenhoff
November
25, 202312:40 AM GMT+1Updated a day ago
https://www.reuters.com/markets/europe/budget-crisis-shakes-industrys-confidence-germany-2023-11-24/
FRANKFURT/DUESSELDORF,
Nov 24 (Reuters) - Germany's intensifying budget crisis is hitting Europe's top
economy where it hurts most: its reputation as a reliable partner for industry,
some of which now fears that Berlin may not stand by its pledges to fund green
and other projects.
As well as
tearing a 60 billion euro ($65 billion) hole in the government's 2024 spending
plans, the constitutional court ruling raises wider questions about aid for big
industrial projects that were supposed to be supported with public money.
These
include plans by ArcelorMittal , the world's second-largest steelmaker, to
spend 2.5 billion euros to decarbonise its German steel mills, efforts that
depend on now-uncertain government support.
"We
are disappointed and, above all, concerned, as we still lack funding decisions
and thus a perspective for our industrial production in Germany," said
Reiner Blaschek, who heads ArcelorMittal's German division.
He called
the government's inability to come up with a quick fix for the budget impasse
"grossly negligent", highlighting the potential consequences for
Germany, which is already struggling to keep its place as a prime industrial
location.
Chancellor
Olaf Scholz in a video message on Friday said the government was reworking the
2024 budget swiftly and that all necessary decisions would be taken this year.
ArcelorMittal's
German rival SHS Stahl-Holding-Saar has also not received a formal commitment
from Berlin to support a 3.5 billion euro investment push to drastically cut
CO2 emissions at its furnaces.
Chief
Executive Stefan Rauber said a solution had to be found within days, not weeks,
and that he needed a decision by the end of the year to make the programme
happen.
"What
we're seeing here is devastating for Germany as a business location globally.
And the longer it goes the worse it will get," he said.
Besides the
6 billion euros of steel investments, other sectors potentially affected by the
court ruling include 4 billion euros in the area of microelectronics and 20
billion euros for battery cell production, according to an economy ministry
paper seen by Reuters.
It also
covers so-called climate protection agreements that are supposed to help
industry protect itself against power price swings, the paper said. Those have
previously been estimated at 68 billion euros.
'NOT COMPETITIVE'
Germany has
long been criticised for insufficient investment in key economic infrastructure
- the IMF this year repeated a call for Berlin to create more fiscal room for
investing in the country's future.
Critics say
its constitutionally enshrined debt brake, which puts very strict limits on how
much new debt it can take on, is a somewhat arbitrary political tool that
restricts the space for those investments.
The court's
decision to block the repurposing of unused funds from the pandemic for green
investment has cast doubt over the fate of other off-budget funding vehicles
and a cloud over future spending plans in 2024 and beyond.
The
comments from industry reflect broad concern it will limit Germany's ability to
stand by its funding commitments to major expansion projects including some by
Intel INTC.O, Taiwan's TSMC 2300.TW and Infineon IFXGn.DE.
Making
matters worse, the budget turmoil creates a fresh layer of problems when
Germany is already fighting for investment with locations in Asia and the
United States, and faces the risk of big industrial players moving sites
abroad.
The U.S.
Inflation Reduction Act (IRA) has provided companies with clear regulatory
frameworks, including in the nascent field of hydrogen, which is key for
Germany's efforts to make its industry carbon neutral.
"If
there's an impression ... that it is unsafe to walk this path with German
companies ... then plant manufacturers will look to the IRA and other projects
in the USA, simply because investment security is there," said Bernhard
Osburg, CEO of Thyssenkrupp (TKAG.DE) Steel Europe.
While there
are concerns over what the budget hole means for projects in the short-term,
fears are growing that it could weaken Germany's ability to co-sponsor the
longer-term transformation of its industries.
Some worry
that plans to lower power prices for industry, a key effort to keep chemicals
heavyweights such as BASF (BASFn.DE) and Wacker Chemie (WCHG.DE) competitive,
could be derailed, too.
"Important
industries in Germany, such as chemicals or steel production, need economical
energy prices," Oliver Blume, CEO of Europe's top carmaker Volkswagen
(VOWG_p.DE), told Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung.
"We
are currently not competitive on a global scale."
($1 =
0.9168 euros)
Reporting
by Christoph Steitz and Tom Kaeckenhoff; Additional reporting by Andreas Rinke;
Editing by Catherine Evans

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