Germany will be forced to take on 310 billion euros ($437 billion) in new debt by 2013, according to the country's finance minister, Peer Steinbrueck. He admitted that it will take Germany years to meet EU budget rules. Steinbrueck said Europe's largest economy, battling to emerge form its steepest recession in 60 years, is faced with "mammoth task." There is no alternative to the higher borrowings, Steinbrueck told the German newspaper Tagesspiegel, ahead of signing off on his draft 2010 budget. The draft budget forsees new credit totaling 86 billion euros, the biggest ever in German post-war history. This figure could increase to more than 100 billion euros due to additional costs for a plan to bail out troubled banks. For the current financial year, new credits have been allocated totaling nearly 48 billion euros - also a record. The budget will be the first responsibility of the new administration following September's parliamentary election.
Steinbrueck said Europe's largest economy, battling to emerge form its steepest recession in 60 years, is faced with "mammoth task."
There is no alternative to the higher borrowings, Steinbrueck told the German newspaper Tagesspiegel, ahead of signing off on his draft 2010 budget.
The draft budget forsees new credit totaling 86 billion euros, the biggest ever in German post-war history. This figure could increase to more than 100 billion euros due to additional costs for a plan to bail out troubled banks.
For the current financial year, new credits have been allocated totaling nearly 48 billion euros - also a record. The budget will be the first responsibility of the new administration following September's parliamentary election.
Chancellor Merkel's cabinet on Wednesday approved a draft budget plan which calls for 310 billion euros of new debt in the next four years. In 2010, Berlin is expected to set a post-war record for deficit spending. In the early years of Chancellor Angela Merkel's term in office, her finance minister, Peer Steinbrück, made a name for himself as being tight-fisted, debt averse and committed to balancing Germany's budget. That, though, was before the financial crisis hit. German Finance Minister Peer Steinbrück has said that the path out of the recession will be a difficult one. Now, Steinbrück is struggling to find ways to pay for Berlin's suddenly profligate spending as it tries to buy its way out of the crisis. On Wednesday, Merkel's cabinet adopted a plan presented by Steinbrück which provides the framework for the next four years of German fiscal planning. In total, it calls for 310 billion ($436 billion) in fresh debt from 2010 to 2013, including a whopping 86.1 billion ($121.2 billion) for 2010, far and away the largest single-year budgetary hole in the history of post-war Germany. The 2010 total could even top 100 billion depending on the development of expenses related to Germany's economic stimulus packages (worth a total of 82 billion) and its bank bailout fund (worth 500 billion). Germany's previous record for fresh debt in a single fiscal year was the 40 billion borrowed in 1996. Steinbrück's new plan calls for new debt to begin falling after 2010, with 71.1 billion necessary in 2011, 58.7 billion in 2012 and 45.9 billion in 2013.
Chancellor Merkel's cabinet on Wednesday approved a draft budget plan which calls for 310 billion euros of new debt in the next four years. In 2010, Berlin is expected to set a post-war record for deficit spending.
In the early years of Chancellor Angela Merkel's term in office, her finance minister, Peer Steinbrück, made a name for himself as being tight-fisted, debt averse and committed to balancing Germany's budget. That, though, was before the financial crisis hit.
German Finance Minister Peer Steinbrück has said that the path out of the recession will be a difficult one. Now, Steinbrück is struggling to find ways to pay for Berlin's suddenly profligate spending as it tries to buy its way out of the crisis.
On Wednesday, Merkel's cabinet adopted a plan presented by Steinbrück which provides the framework for the next four years of German fiscal planning. In total, it calls for 310 billion ($436 billion) in fresh debt from 2010 to 2013, including a whopping 86.1 billion ($121.2 billion) for 2010, far and away the largest single-year budgetary hole in the history of post-war Germany.
The 2010 total could even top 100 billion depending on the development of expenses related to Germany's economic stimulus packages (worth a total of 82 billion) and its bank bailout fund (worth 500 billion). Germany's previous record for fresh debt in a single fiscal year was the 40 billion borrowed in 1996. Steinbrück's new plan calls for new debt to begin falling after 2010, with 71.1 billion necessary in 2011, 58.7 billion in 2012 and 45.9 billion in 2013.