BERLIN: German Economy Minister Robert Habeck laid out plans to remedy weak growth in Europe’s largest economy on Wednesday by starting a fund to stimulate investment and changing course on Germany’s budget policy. Creating a climate-neutral modern industrial future requires massive investment, both public and private, which is being held back by Germany’s restrictive budgetary policy, Habeck wrote in a 14-page position paper.
"There is too little leeway in the budget to enable private and public investment on a significantly larger scale than today,” he wrote. The International Monetary Fund (IMF) this week significantly downgraded its forecasts for Germany. No other major industrialized country is currently weakening as much. Habeck, whose name has been widely floated as the Greens’ candidate for chancellor in elections next year, took aim specifically at the country’s constitutionally enshrined cap on spending.
The debt brake is a sacred cow of the Free Democrats (FDP), which governs along with the Greens and Chancellor Olaf Scholz’s SPD. To bypass it, Habeck wants to introduce a multibillion-euro "Germany Fund” to modernize infrastructure and provide an "unbureaucratic” investment premium of 10 percent for all companies. The proposed fund would focus in particular on small and medium-sized enterprises, large corporations and start-ups.
The investment premium would be offset against the company’s tax liability. Unlike a simple improvement in write-offs, companies that do not make a profit at all, such as newly founded ones, would also receive the premium, wrote Habeck. The measure should be limited to five years, he said, adding that greater economic growth should ensure the national debt would increase only moderately related to economic output. Habeck, who joins a government delegation to India this week for talks on trade and investment, also called for slimmed-down trade deals with countries such as India and Indonesia that, for example, focus on industrial standards and leave out agricultural goods.
FDP deputy leader Wolfgang Kubicki said Habeck’s proposals could only be seen as serious if they acknowledged that there was not enough political support to abolish the brake. He told the Rheinische Post newspaper that Habeck needed to state what the measure would cost current and future taxpayers. The SPD’s general secretary, Matthias Miersch, welcomed the proposal and said it was crucial now that all parties are working constructively on how to strengthen the German economy.
An industry summit planned for next week, where Scholz will meet industry associations, trade unions and firms, "is the right place for this,” he told the Rheinische Post. — Reuters