BCN-01 German finance minister plans 40 bn euros for councils

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BCN-01

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German finance minister plans 40 bn euros for councils

FRANKFURT AM MAIN, Dec 21, 2019 (BSS/AFP) – German finance minister Olaf
Scholz said Saturday that Berlin could help lift a 40-billion-euro ($44
billion) debt burden off struggling local authorities, potentially enabling
new outlays on schools and infrastructure.

Of over 11,000 local authorities nationwide, there are “around 2,500 towns
and municipalities squeezed by so much debt that they’re gasping for breath,”
Scholz told the Funke Newspaper Group.

After years of a no-new-debts policy known as the “black zero”, economists
and EU partners are increasingly pressuring Berlin to upgrade ageing
infrastructure and stimulate its flagging economy with new spending.

Officials like Scholz often retort that rather than a lack of funds, the
real problem is planning and financial bottlenecks at local authorities, who
are responsible for spending on items like schools and roads.

The Social Democrat (SPD) party finance minister said that the total
amount owed by overindebted communities was around 40 billion euros, most of
them in western states like North Rhine-Westphalia.

The populous former coal and steel heartland has suffered from
deindustrialisation in recent decades.

Scholz’s plans still face hard talks with coalition partners in Chancellor
Angela Merkel’s conservative CDU party, as well as with leaders of the states
with fewer financially troubled local authorities.

“In a federal system it’s sometimes like a family, where one child
complains that the other has got a new jacket and it hasn’t, because its own
is spotless,” Scholz said.

He added that “interest rates are favourable” for restructuring public
debt.

Meanwhile shifting the burden to Berlin would not increase Germany’s
overall indebtedness as measured by the EU’s Maastricht criteria, which call
for states to owe less than 60 percent of annual output, Scholz said.

Berlin proudly declared this year that it would achieve the goal for the
first time since 2002.

BSS/AFP/HR/0912