In mid-November, Germany’s Constitutional Court in Karlsruhe ruled against the Ampelkoalition’s efforts to get around the country’s “debt brake” to use “special funds” to finance its ambitious legislative agenda. At issue was a budgeting maneuver to move 60 billion euros of unused pandemic aid to a fund for Germany’s green transition. But the ruling raises questions about the government’s ability to access a total of €869 billion, which is not included in the federal budget but in 29 different “special funds.” It also forced the government to freeze new spending and put approval of the 2024 budget on hold.
In 2009, Germany introduced the Schuldenbremse – limiting the government’s structural budget deficit to 0.35% of gross domestic product – following the global financial crisis. However, the government had to suspend the debt brake in 2020 as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic, which it is allowed to do in “exceptional emergencies.” On Tuesday, Chancellor Olaf Scholz urged lawmakers to override Germany’s borrowing limits for a fourth consecutive year.
Join the ACG for a discussion about the foreign policy, national security, energy policy, and domestic implications of Germany’s budget crisis with Bundestag member Metin Hakverdi (SPD) on Wednesday, December 6.