Transcript Folie 1
Prof. Dr. Christoph Gröpl
Lehrstuhl für Staats- und
Verwaltungsrecht
The new German ‘Debt Brake‘
—a constitutional attempt to
restrain state indebtedness
’Debt Brake‘
Israel
public debt: € 54 bn
(≈ $ 78 bn)
population: 7.6 m
≈ € 7,000 per capita
Germany
public debt: € 2,000 bn
(≈ $ 2,908 bn)
population: 82 m
≈ € 24,000 per capita
Prof. Dr. Christoph Gröpl · Debt Brake
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’Debt Brake‘
Hierarchy of Norms
(national level)
Constitution
Parliamentary
Acts
other acts of State
Prof. Dr. Christoph Gröpl · Debt Brake
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’Debt Brake‘
Art. 115 par. 1 Basic Law (version 1969)
[…] Revenue obtained by borrowing shall not
exceed the total of investment expenditures
provided for in the budget…
… exceptions shall be permissible to avert
a disturbance of the overall economic
equilibrium.
FCC: wide range of discretion
for the budgetary legislator
Prof. Dr. Christoph Gröpl · Debt Brake
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’Debt Brake‘
Art. 126 par. 1 TFEU (Lisbon version 2009)
annual deficit limited to 3% GDP
overall debt restrained to 60% GDP
Problem: lack of enforcement
Prof. Dr. Christoph Gröpl · Debt Brake
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’Debt Brake‘
Art. 109 par. 3 Basic Law (version 2009)
The budgets of the Bund and the Länder
shall in principle be balanced without
revenues from credits.
(applicability: 2016 [Bund], 2020 [Länder])
Exceptions:
deficits in times of downswing to balance
the effects of market developments that
deviate from normal conditions
unusual emergency situations beyond
governmental control and substantially
harmful to the state’s financial capacity
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Thank you
for your attention!
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