In its latest annual report, the German government’s group of leading economic
advisors has vehemently criticized both the government’s recently announced
tax cut plans, and the “empty” statements contained in the coalition
agreement regarding budgetary consolidation.
According to the group of experts, who regularly advise the government on financial
and economic issues, given the significant budget deficit, plans to implement
tax reductions without a means of financing the proposed initiatives
are simply not compatible with a “serious finance policy.”
The report warns that improved economic growth alone, which the government
hopes to achieve through the introduction of significant tax cuts, will not
serve to consolidate the budget. Consequently, significant savings must be made
from 2011, the report continues.
Despite the fact that the coalition agreement highlights the need to consolidate
the budget, the five leading economists nevertheless criticized the government’s
failure to divulge concrete measures designed to achieve this goal, and to reduce the
record debt that has accumulated as a result of the ongoing economic crisis.
Attacking the government over its plans to reduce the tax burden on individuals
and on businesses from 2011 by around EUR24bn annually, the report emphasizes
that a reduction in tax revenue of this scale is simply not
viable over the course of the next few years.
Without hard cuts in public spending and increases in taxes and other contributions,
a consolidation of the state budget is not possible, the report concludes. The
government must, at the very least, abandon its tax cut plans, it warns.
Responding to the report, Chancellor Angela Merkel’s spokesman Ulrich
Wilhelm confirmed the government’s intention to press ahead with the agreed
initiatives contained in the agreement, without any amendments, despite advice
to the contrary.
Germany’s Finance Minister Wolfgang Schäuble, who has recently –
and rather controversially – ruled out a comprehensive reform
of the country’s taxation, welcomed the report’s recommendations.