Germany is having a budget crisis. With the
economy struggling, it’s not the best time
With its economy already struggling, Germany now is
wrestling to find a way out of a budget crisis after a court struck down
billions in funding for clean energy projects and help for people facing high
energy bills because of Russia's war in Ukraine.
BY DAVID
MCHUGH
Updated
6:07 AM CET, November 28, 2023
https://apnews.com/article/german-economy-budget-crisis-scholz-d6015679d5c4604f9a16a118bb445983
FRANKFURT,
Germany (AP) — With its economy struggling, Germany now is wrestling to find a
way out of a budget crisis after a court struck down billions in funding for
clean energy projects and help for companies and consumers facing high utility
bills because of Russia’s war in Ukraine.
Chancellor
Olaf Scholz plans to lay out how he and his quarrelsome governing coalition aim
to fix things in a speech to parliament Tuesday. The government must hastily
find cuts in the almost-finished spending plan for next year, analysts say,
which could further slow what is already the world’s worst-performing major
economy.
A long-term
solution, however, could take years, possibly until after the next national
elections scheduled for 2025. That’s because the strict legal limits on
borrowing cited in the Nov. 15 court decision are enshrined in the country’s
constitution, and a two-thirds majority in parliament is required to soften
them.
Economists
say spending cuts will only add to the challenges facing Europe’s largest
economy after Russia cut off the cheap natural gas that fueled its factories,
squeezing businesses and raising the cost of living for households paying more
for energy.
“We’ve
voluntarily tied our hands behind our backs, and we’re going into a boxing
match,” Vice Chancellor Robert Habeck said Friday, saying the debt rules were
from a time when peace reigned and climate change wasn’t taken seriously.
Alluding to
massive government investment in green technology by the U.S. and China, he
added, “The others have horseshoes in their gloves, and we don’t even have our
hands free. It’s clear how that will end.”
Germany’s
constitutional court has voided some 60 billion euros ($65 billion) in spending
for this year and next. It said the government could not shift unused funding
meant for COVID-19 relief to boost wind and solar projects, help with energy
bills and encourage investment in computer chip production.
The
constitution limits deficits to 0.35% of economic output, though the government
can go beyond that if there’s an emergency it didn’t create, such as the
pandemic.
The ruling
also could apply to other national and local spending based on the same
now-rejected accounting maneuver, covering as much as 130 billion euros in
expected spending through 2027.
Some of the
disallowed spending has already been used this year. To comply with the ruling,
the government is changing the 2023 budget by declaring an emergency, citing
Russia’s cutoff of natural gas supplies and higher energy prices.
Without yet
another emergency declaration next year, the government would have to scramble
to cover shortfalls of roughly 30 billion to 40 billion euros — plus 20 billion
to 30 billion euros for 2025 — compared with earlier plans, according to Holger
Schmieding, chief economist at Berenberg bank.
Some
spending can be moved to public-private partnerships or taken over by the
country’s development bank. But those fudges will only go so far. Ultimately,
spending may be reduced by as much as 0.5% of annual economic output for the
next two budget years, Schmieding said.
The debt
limits were enacted in 2009 after the government piled up debt paying to
rebuild former East Germany after Germany reunified at the end of the Cold War
and when tax revenue dropped during the 2007-2009 global financial crisis and
Great Recession.
For years
afterward, Germany balanced its budget or even ran small surpluses as the
economy lived large on cheap Russian natural gas and booming exports of luxury
cars and industrial machinery, with rapidly growing China serving as a major
market. Economists say the government skimped on investment in infrastructure,
renewable energy and digitalization — gaps it is now trying to make up.
The fallout
has left Germany projected to be the worst-performing major economy this year,
shrinking by 0.5%, according to the International Monetary Fund.
Prospects
for next year are only a little better. Industry is struggling with energy
prices and a lack of skilled labor, while Chinese automakers are challenging
Germany’s Volkswagen, BMW and Mercedes-Benz and have plans to expand sales
across Europe.
The budget
debate is ironic because Germany has the smallest long-term debt pile of any of
the Group of Seven advanced democracies, with debt of 66% of gross domestic
product. That compares to 102% in Britain, 121% in the U.S., 144% in Italy and
260% in Japan.
The
now-banned spending was aimed at some of the long-term problems plaguing
economic growth, such as the need to invest in new sources of affordable
renewable energy like wind, solar and hydrogen. That has led to calls from some
to loosen the debt limits because they restrict the government’s response to
new challenges.
But
Scholz’s coalition of Social Democrats, Greens and pro-business Free Democrats
doesn’t have the two-thirds majority to do that without the conservative
opposition, the Christian Democrats, who brought the legal challenge in the
first place.
Yet even
some opposition state governors have said the debt limits should be loosened.
Berlin Mayor Kai Wegener, a member of the Christian Democrats, said the
provision was “a brake on the future.”
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