GERMANY DEBT BRAKE RULE - INTERNATIONAL

News: What is the controversy over Germany’s debt brake rule? | Explained

 

What's in the news?

       Germany’s constitutional court ruled unlawful a government move to reallocate €60 billion, unused from the sums initially earmarked for the pandemic emergency, to a “climate and transformation fund” (KTF).

 

Debt Brake Rule:

       The debt brake rule caps government borrowing and restricts the federal government’s fiscal deficit to 0.35% of GDP, while prohibiting deficit spending by Germany’s 16 regions.

 

Enactment:

       This rule was incorporated into German law in 2009 by a coalition, mirroring the EU’s Stability and Growth Pact and the 2012 Fiscal Compact Treaty.

 

Legal Challenge and Its Implications

1. Opposition’s Argument:

       It argued that climate change and energy transition investments, being long-term, shouldn’t be funded by the debt brake’s emergency exemption, which was specific to COVID-19 relief.

2. Government’s Defence:

       The government contended that the reallocated funds addressed economic consequences of the pandemic by linking investment shortfalls to COVID-19’s economic impact.