National Post

Germany planning new borrowing of nearly 100 billion euros in 2021

- Birgit Jennen

Germany’s federal government is planning new borrowing of 96.2 billion euros (us$114 billion) next year, as europe’s biggest economy seeks to spend its way out of the deep recession caused by the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Chancellor Angela merkel’s ruling coalition abandoned a long-standing policy of running balanced budgets in march, and new debt is set to swell to a record of around 218 billion euros this year, or about 6 per cent of output. Constituti­onal restrictio­ns on federal borrowing will be suspended for a second year in 2021, allowing Finance minister Olaf Scholz to keep the fiscal taps open as the country prepares for a general election due in a year’s time.

From 2022, new debt will be drasticall­y reduced and the mandated borrowing limit restored. New debt is projected to fall to 10.5 billion euros that year, before declining to 6.7 billion euros in 2023 and 5.2 billion euros in 2024.

Additional measures, such as tax increases or spending cuts, will be required to reach those targets.

The figures are part of a financing program presented Friday by senior government officials who asked not to be identified in line with briefing rules. The plan is due to be signed off in cabinet on Wednesday, before beginning its passage through parliament at the end of the month.

Next year’s budget plan includes spending of 413.4 billion euros, down from 508.5 billion euros this year, while the deficit will be just under 3 per cent of GDP, according to bloomberg calculatio­ns.

Partly thanks to the government’s giant stimulus program, German activity has staged a strong rebound after collapsing in the second quarter when the country went into widespread lockdown.

The economy ministry forecasts that output will still shrink by 5.8 per cent this year, and it doesn’t expect pre-crisis levels to be reached again until 2022. Although that’s one of the biggest contractio­ns since the end of the Second World War, it’s smaller than initially feared, as measures to shore up domestic demand take hold.

 ?? FABRIZIO bensch / reuters / POOL FILES ?? Germany’s Chancellor Angela Merkel and Finance Minister Olaf Scholz plan to keep the fiscal taps open as their country rebounds from the pandemic shutdown.
FABRIZIO bensch / reuters / POOL FILES Germany’s Chancellor Angela Merkel and Finance Minister Olaf Scholz plan to keep the fiscal taps open as their country rebounds from the pandemic shutdown.

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