Sommario:Germanys energy-intensive industries, low investment, ageing population and weak growth, rather than high government debt, represent challenges to its AAA credit rating – hence the need to reform the debt brake.
Germany‘s constitutional court ruling on the federal supplementary budget of 2021 and its strict interpretation of debt-brake borrowing limitations have reinforced the country’s rigid fiscal rules but also intensified debate on their possible reform.
Such reform could encourage future German governments to increase long-term investment and address a EUR 300bn investment lag, while raising the country‘s growth potential. Over the past three decades, Germany’s net public sector investment has fallen behind that of other AAA-rated sovereigns and other large economies (Figure 1).
The fiscal space to increase investment is available. The question remains whether political consensus can be achieved to agree on a reformed debt brake that enables effective use of this fiscal space.
Low levels of public sector investment have curbed Germanys growth potential, which we estimate at around 0.8%, the lowest among sovereigns rated AAA by Scope Ratings (averaging 1.7%) as well as below other large economies such as the United States (2.0%), France (1.4%), the United Kingdom (1.5%), Italy (1.0%), and Spain (1.8%).
Figure 1: Low German public sector investment contributes to its low growth potential
Growth potential, %, and general government net fixed capital formation, % of GDP
Source: European Commission, Scope Ratings. Note: Sovereigns rated AAA by Scope (aside from Germany) include Austria, Denmark, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, Norway, Sweden, Switzerland. Net public investment is only one factor contributing to a countrys growth potential. Others include private sector investments to raise the capital stock, demographic growth, and employment dynamics.Reforming The Debt Brake To Help Increase Long-term Investment
A range of proposals are being discussed regarding possible ways to ease the debt brake, all of which are in line with the recently re-adopted EU fiscal rules.
Possible reforms include leaving the debt-brake rule unchanged or loosening the deficit restriction depending on the level of debt and allowing more time after a crisis to return to deficit targets. Another option is excluding net investments from the debt brake limitations to finance long-term capital expenditure. Alternatively, Germany could set up a constitutionally anchored special fund for green and digital transformation spending.
Reform proposals with a greater focus on encouraging governments to raise long-term investment are more likely to be effective at supporting Germanys future growth and competitiveness. However, as any amendment to the debt brake requires a change to the German Basic Law, cross-party political support is needed from the three ruling coalition partners and the largest opposition party CDU/CSU. As such, parties may struggle to agree on what expenditure items count towards qualifying investments.
To be sure, proposals that ease the government deficit limit of 0.35% of GDP based on different debt-to-GDP levels would make the debt brake significantly more flexible. However, such reforms would not address the underlying challenge of making long-term commitments to increasing investment spending at the risk of keeping the focus on short-term consumption expenditure, which makes up a large portion of the federal governments budget. The ministry of labour and social affairs has the largest line item in the 2024 budget, accounting for 38.5% of the total (EUR 171.7bn), of which EUR 127bn will be spent on pension insurance and income support.
Germany Has The Fiscal Space To Allow For Higher Borrowing Limits
Germany has fiscal space to fund higher public spending to support the energy transition. If future budgets make full use of the current government deficit limit of 0.35% of GDP under the existing debt brake (assuming no additional emergency borrowing and a largely balanced cyclical fiscal component), the countrys debt-to-GDP ratio will continue to decrease over coming years from 65% in 2023 to around 59% by 2028.
Doubling the deficit to 0.7% of GDP would allow for additional spending of around EUR 80bn over the next five years, with the debt-to-GDP ratio stabilising at around 61%.
Considering the two most recent large global shocks with a big impact on Germanys indebtedness, this still gives sufficient fiscal buffers to respond to future economic crises. The 2008 global financial crisis increased the debt ratio by around 17.8pps between 2007 and 2010, while the 2020 pandemic and 2022 energy crises resulted in an increase of 9.4pps between 2019 and 2022.
While every economic shock is unique, the current debt trajectory implies that Germany will have sufficient fiscal buffers for the debt ratio to remain below its 2010 peak of 82%, even if there were a shock to public sector balance sheets equivalent to that of the global financial crisis.
While the coalition government quickly agreed a revised budget for 2024, reaching consensus on next years budget is likely to be more challenging. The government will have exhausted the reserves in its climate and transformation fund, making contributions from the 2025 and 2026 budgets necessary to fund future investment.
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Eiko Sievert is a Director in Sovereign and Public Sector ratings and member of the Macroeconomic Council at Scope Ratings GmbH.
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