Germany said to face $42b budget shortfall (AP) Updated: 2005-10-25 09:56
Germany faces a $42 billion budget shortfall, its two main political parties
said Monday, signaling tough spending cuts or tax hikes under a planned
coalition even as its economy struggles.
Conservative Chancellor-designate Angela Merkel said the sum was the
shortfall a right-left coalition government had to make up by the end of 2006 to
bring Germany within EU budget limits the following year.
"We face a heavy burden," Merkel said late Monday after a second round of
talks with outgoing Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder's Social Democrats.
"We want to master the problems but will have to make big, big efforts" to
tackle the problems left by Schroeder's seven-year tenure, she said.
Merkel said there were still "considerable differences" over exactly how to
tackle the budget deficit and reform Germany's tightly regulated labor market.
Conservative leader and Chancellor-designate
Angela Merkel pauses as she addresses a news conference following the
second round of coalition talks with the Social Democrats at her
headquarters in Berlin October 24, 2005. The new German government will
have to find 35 billion euros ($41.80 billion) in extra revenues and
savings to meet European Union budget rules by 2007, political leaders
said on Monday. It would be the biggest budget consolidation ever
attempted by a postwar German government. "We are facing enormous
challenges," Merkel said following talks on forming a power-sharing
coalition with the Social Democrats (SPD).
[Reuters] | But both she and Social Democrat
leaders said they were confident they would find an agreement by mid-November,
opening the way for her to become the country's first female chancellor.
Years of sluggish growth have driven unemployment figures into double digits
and pushed Germany's budget deficit over the EU-mandated limit of 3 percent of
gross domestic product.
Consequently, a new government will have limited room to maneuver, amid
warnings that both new taxes and reduced spending could hurt Europe's largest
economy.
Conservatives were forced to seek a "grand coalition"
with their erstwhile Social Democrat opponents after neither won a majority in
Sept. 18 elections.
|