Exclusive: Germany eyes up to 50 billion euros of
additional debt for stimulus push - source
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[June 10, 2020] By
Michael Nienaber and Holger Hansen
BERLIN (Reuters) - German Finance Minister Olaf Scholz is considering
borrowing up to another 50 billion euros ($56.8 billion) to finance
Berlin's bumper stimulus package, a senior official with knowledge of
the discussions told Reuters.
The plan to take on more debt underline Germany's massive fiscal shift
from Europe's former austerity champion to one of the biggest spenders
in the euro zone's efforts to counter the economic impact of the
coronavirus pandemic.
Chancellor Angela Merkel's cabinet is planning to pass a second
supplementary budget on June 17 to finance measures to support Europe's
largest economy, said the official, who spoke on condition of anonymity.
Another official with knowledge of the budget plans also said cabinet
wanted to pass the extra budget next Wednesday, adding the finance
ministry was looking at issuing more debt than the originally envisaged
25-30 billion euros.
Both sources said the finance ministry wanted a bigger financial buffer
so it could react better to unexpected events in the second half of the
year.
The additional borrowing of up to 50 billion euros would come on top of
Berlin's debt-financed supplementary budget worth 156 billion euros
agreed in March.
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German Finance Minister Olaf Scholz arrives for a news conference in
Berlin, Germany May 14, 2020. Michael Sohn/Pool via REUTERS
This means the government's overall net new borrowing could balloon beyond 200
billion euros this year, equivalent of roughly 6% of Germany's economic output.
In addition, the government in March issued debt authorization of up to 100
billion euros for its economic stability fund that can take direct equity stakes
in companies and up to 100 billion euros in further credit to public-sector
development bank KfW for loans to struggling businesses.
A finance ministry spokesman declined to comment on the exact figure of
additional debt.
The government predicts Germany's debt-to-GDP ratio to jump to more than 75%
this year from just below 60% in 2019, a leap in German borrowing not seen since
a massive stimulus boost during the global financial crisis more than a decade
ago.
(Reporting by Holger Hansen and Michael Nienaber; Editing by Maria Sheahan and
Toby Chopra)
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