German Cabinet okays lower 2024 budget

Eyes a return to financial ‘normality’;

Update: 2023-07-05 18:15 GMT

Germany’s Cabinet on Wednesday approved a draft 2024 budget that foresees lower spending, with defence among the exceptions, as Europe’s biggest economy sticks to rules limiting borrowing that were suspended during the coronavirus pandemic.

The government’s plan calls for spending of 445.7 billion euros (USD 486 billion), down 6.4 per cent from the 476.3 billion euros it expects to spend this year.

Defence spending is set to rise by 1.7 billion euros to some 51.8 billion euros, some way short of what the defence minister initially sought.

Germany plans to reach a NATO target of spending 2 per cent of gross

domestic product on defence next year, a measure on which it has long fallen short, with help from a special 100 billion-euro fund set up to modernize the German military after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. Berlin aims to meet the target via its regular budget later this decade.

“Security, economic prosperity and industrial fitness for the future, climate neutrality and cohesion are the most important

characteristics of a budget that of course is challenged by the

fact that many in recent years have got used to the big dimensions” associated with measures to tackle

the effects of the pandemic and Russia’s war in Ukraine, Chancellor Olaf Scholz told lawmakers.

Scholz’s three-party coalition is returning this year to compliance with

Germany’s so-called debt brake, which allows new borrowing to the tune of only 0.35 per cent of annual gross domestic product.

It can be suspended to deal with natural disasters or other emergencies that are out of the state’s control, and

was for three years

after the coronavirus pandemic started in 2020 to allow for large amounts of borrowing to finance various support and stimulus packages.

Finance Minister Christian Lindner and his pro-business Free Democrats have been particularly adamant

about saving

money to adhere to those rules, and the coalition also has agreed at their

insistence not to

raise taxes

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