German coalition leaders to resume budget talks on Sunday -sources

Reuters

Published Dec 10, 2023 11:03

Updated Dec 10, 2023 17:46

By Andreas Rinke and Reinhard Becker

BERLIN (Reuters) -Leaders of Germany's ruling coalition will resume talks about next year's budget on Sunday evening, seeking agreement on how to plug a 17 billion euro ($18 billion) hole left by a court ruling last month, people familiar with the matter said.

Chancellor Olaf Scholz of the Social Democrats (SPD), Economy Minister Robert Habeck of the Greens and Finance Minister Christian Lindner from the fiscally conservative Free Democrats (FDP) have so far failed to reach a compromise.

Scholz, whose public ratings as chancellor have fallen to a record low, is keen to reach an agreement, the people said, pointing to uncertainty over how future industrial projects will be funded and the impact that could have on the economy.

Germany's budget has been thrown into disarray by a November Constitutional Court ruling that Berlin could not redirect 60 billion euros of unused funds from the COVID pandemic to climate transformation projects. The ruling has left a 17 billion euro hole in the 2024 budget.

"That's not easy," Germany's Transport Minister Volker Wissing of the FDP told broadcaster ARD, saying replacing the 60 billion euros was a "Herculean task".

Wissing himself has requested 40 billion euros to upgrade the rail network of Deutsche Bahn by 2027, money that is no longer certain to be available.

On Saturday, Scholz told the SPD's party conference he was confident a deal would be reached but said there would be no cuts to the welfare state, an area where Lindner wants reform.

SPD delegates backed a call for another suspension of Germany's self-imposed debt brake, which Lindner opposes.

The impasse has fuelled concerns among local and foreign industrial firms over whether Europe's largest economy can stand by its funding pledges for green transformation projects in the steel, chip and tech sectors.

Union leaders on Sunday warned that unless Germany's three-way coalition finds a solution soon, thousands of jobs and several high-profile investment projects would be put at risk, potentially damaging the country's long-term competitiveness.

"Strategic investment decisions for the coming decades are being made now," said Juergen Kerner, deputy head of Germany's most powerful union IG Metall, who also sits on the supervisory boards of Siemens AG (ETR:SIEGn) and Thyssenkrupp (ETR:TKAG).

"Now is the time to decide whether Germany will remain a strong industrialised country with good jobs. For this to succeed, it needs a capable state that invests in the future."