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Germany signals more help for struggling businesses, workers

Merkel’s coalition government says plan will help hotels; difference­s emerge among ministers on raising top taxes

- Reuters Frankfurt

HIGH LIGHTS

Politician­s in German Chancellor Angela Merkel’s coalition government on Sunday signaled further support for struggling businesses and consumers in the coronaviru­s crisis, focusing on hotels, restaurant­s and pay for short-time workers.

Dehoga, an industry associatio­n that includes a large share of often small family-owned operations, told Bild am Sonntag that some 70,000 restaurant and hotel operators, which employ 223,000 people, could face insolvency as they stood to lose up to €10 billion of sales by the end of April. Economy Minister Peter Altmaier of Merkel’s conservati­ve party said in an interview with the same newspaper he agreed the sector needed support to get up on its feet again.

“It is clear that we will need additional help to prevent a large part of these companies giving up and disappeari­ng from the market,” he said.

Altmaier said he would look into possibly lowering value added taxes for the industry, but he could also imagine concrete grants to pay for modernizat­ion and cost savings measures.

New coronaviru­s infections and recovery numbers in Germany have been looking more manageable in recent days.

But politician­s and authoritie­s agree that economic life can only restart very gradually to avoid fresh waves of rapid infections, leaving businesses starved of turnover.

Finance Minister Olaf Scholz,

who represents the Social Democratic party (SPD), also included hotels in those industries that he believed should receive targeted aid in an interview with Welt am Sonntag.

But Altmaier differed from Scholz, who had proposed taxing high earners more to help finance aid programs.

“Higher state revenues are achieved predominan­tly through more powerful growth and investment­s,” Altmaier said.

Merkel’s chief of staff, Helge Braun, said in the Rheinische Post and General Anzeiger papers on Saturday he would not rule out the government making available further aid within weeks to support the economy at large.

The government was also discussing increases to state aided short-time workers’ pay in order to boost spending power, Labor Minister Hubertus Heil of the SPD said.

Short-time working is a scheme which allows employers to cut their outlays as employees partly receive state pay, but are kept on the payroll.

Heil said he had proposed raising the state share of short-time pay for the three months of May, June and July.

“I am confident we will produce results here,” he said in a Saturday interview by broadcaste­rs ntv and the Welt newspaper.

 ?? AFP/File ?? The German government is discussing increases to state aided short-time workers’ pay. Short-time working is a scheme which allows employers to cut their outlays.
Some 70,000 restaurant and hotel operators, which employ 223,000 people, could face insolvency as they stood to lose up to €10 billion of sales by the end of April.
New coronaviru­s infections and recovery numbers in Germany have been looking more manageable in recent days.
Politician­s agree that economic life can only restart very gradually to avoid fresh waves of rapid infections.
AFP/File The German government is discussing increases to state aided short-time workers’ pay. Short-time working is a scheme which allows employers to cut their outlays. Some 70,000 restaurant and hotel operators, which employ 223,000 people, could face insolvency as they stood to lose up to €10 billion of sales by the end of April. New coronaviru­s infections and recovery numbers in Germany have been looking more manageable in recent days. Politician­s agree that economic life can only restart very gradually to avoid fresh waves of rapid infections.

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