Europe | Houdininomics

Germany’s debt brake and the art of fantasy budgeting

The country is tiring of its self-imposed fiscal straitjacket

Olaf Scholz,  Robert Habeck, and Christian Lindner take part in a press conference on the 2025 budget.
Photograph: dpa
|BERLIN

Like A SQUIRMING Harry Houdini, Germany’s government has once again wriggled its way out of a straitjacket it applied to itself. On July 5th, having blown through one self-imposed deadline to conclude a draft budget for 2025, the coalition’s negotiators pulled an all-nighter to avoid missing a second. The result, said a bleary-eyed Olaf Scholz, Germany’s chancellor, was a “work of art”.

Explore more

This article appeared in the Europe section of the print edition under the headline “Wriggling out of the straitjacket”

How to raise the world’s IQ

From the July 13th 2024 edition

Discover stories from this section and more in the list of contents

Explore the edition

More from Europe

Russia’s bloody summer offensive is hurting Ukraine

Kremlin troops are making gains in the Donbas region

How much of a difference will Ukraine’s new F-16s make?

Too few to beat Russia’s air force, but a strong symbolic start


Some Germans think the hostage exchange with Russia was a dirty deal

But preserving good relations with America was more important


The deal that freed Evan Gershkovich was more than a prisoner swap

It freed Russian prisoners of conscience as well as Westerners taken hostage by Vladimir Putin

The Olympics are teaching the French to cheer again

France’s politics is a mess, but the games are glorious

Humiliated by Azerbaijan, Armenia tacks towards the West

Courting the EU and America without alienating Russia is a difficult trick