1.1 Expansionary fiscal policy from next year
An expansionary fiscal policy is planned for the coming years. The deficit ratio and the debt ratio will rise significantly. Next year, the deficit ratio is expected to rise above 3 % initially and probably to over 4 % thereafter. This means that the debt ratio will steadily increase.
The deficit-to-GDP ratio could fall this year, though. The deficit ratio is edging down towards 2 % (previous year: 2.7 %). Although expenditure has been increasing substantially, revenue growth has been even stronger. First, the contribution rates of the health insurance institutions and long-term care insurance scheme have risen sharply. Second, the payout period for tax-free and social contribution-exempt inflation compensation bonuses has ended, and wage components subject to regular taxes and social contributions have been taking their place. Third, various one-off developments have been having a positive impact. In particular, receipts from withholding tax on interest income and capital gains as well as from inheritance tax have been recording strong growth. On the expenditure side, spending on pensions, healthcare and long-term care has been rising significantly. The debt ratio was up slightly as at mid-2025, standing at 62.4 % (end-2024: 62.2 %). It could be somewhat higher by the end of the year.
In the coming years, the revenue side will see additional revenue from rising contribution rates to the social security funds alongside revenue shortfalls resulting from tax relief. Looking ahead, the contribution rates for the health, long-term care and pension insurance schemes will have to be raised in order to finance rapidly growing expenditure. By contrast, shortfalls in corporation tax revenue will arise due to temporarily more favourable depreciation options and, starting in 2028, a reduction in the corporation tax rate. Individual groups will benefit from VAT and income tax relief (for example, for meals in restaurants and through the “active pension” for employees working after retirement age). Compensation for bracket creep, which has generally been the norm since 2013, has been extended through 2026. As a minimum, the basic tax allowance will need to be raised further in later years, too, because the minimum subsistence level has to be kept tax-free.
Spending is likely to go up sharply, especially on defence and infrastructure, pensions, healthcare and long-term care, and interest. It is therefore foreseeable that the structural expenditure ratio will rise significantly over the medium-term planning horizon. This is due to central government’s growing use of debt financing for defence spending. As things stand, expenditure on pensions, healthcare and long-term care by the social security funds will altogether have a similar ratio-increasing effect. Additional spending on non-defence infrastructure investment is likely to lag significantly behind this. A particular issue regarding spending on defence and infrastructure investment, however, is that it is difficult to predict how quickly and to what extent it will increase over time. The interest expenditure ratio is likely to go up initially, primarily due to higher average interest rates. Compared with this, the increase in the debt ratio has a lesser weight.
Central government, in particular, will record a large deficit. It is likely to make extensive use of its new scope for borrowing, thus pursuing an expansionary fiscal stance. Specifically, it is planning to borrow on a considerable scale through its exemption for defence spending and via the Infrastructure and Climate Neutrality Fund. It is also expected to fully utilise the regular debt brake. In its medium-term plan, there is still a major need for consolidation in order to comply with the debt brake – even though debt brake requirements were eased significantly in March. How the budget gaps will be closed remains to be seen. The federal states will experience moderate structural deficits if they exploit at least some of their new leeway for structural borrowing. Local governments are likely to scale back their overall large deficit, probably with support from state governments and resources from the Infrastructure and Climate Neutrality Fund. The pension insurance scheme’s deficits will expand significantly before the contribution rate to it rises sharply (see the paragraph starting with “The pension insurance scheme initially finances deficits from its sustainability reserve”).