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POLITICS

EXPLAINED: How deep does the German fear of debt go?

A constitutional debt brake practically unique to Germany has thrown the federal government into chaos as it plans next year’s budget. But the debt brake is a political reflection of a deep cultural fear of debt.

Someone checks the money in their wallet
Germans have a cultural attitude towards debt that's evident in all facets of German life - from politics to buying homes. Photo: picture alliance/dpa/dpa-Zentralbild | Fernando Gutierrez-Juarez

Following a court ruling earlier this month that the federal government’s €60 billion off-balance sheet climate investment fund was unconstitutional, German politics is alive with talk of the budget crisis and how the government plans on fulfilling its promises to invest in the green transition and support Ukraine with both weapons and financial aid.

The reason is the Schuldenbremse – or debt brake – which limits the federal government to borrowing a maximum of 0.35 percent of GDP – about €9 billion. With the debt brake enshrined in the German constitution, it would require a two-thirds majority in the German Bundestag to overturn – an unlikely scenario in most German parliaments. Yet, despite the political chaos it’s causing, most Germans support it.

Schuldenbremse: What is Germany’s debt brake and how does it affect residents?

How popular is the debt brake?

Several recent polls find over 60 percent of Germans are against relaxing or getting rid of the debt brake.

These same polls also find that around 60 percent of think that the government should cut its spending to reduce its budget shortfall, rather than either raise taxes or take on more debt.

So just how indebted is Germany?

It turns out government indebtedness here is about 66 percent of GDP. That’s well under the UK, Canada, France, and the US – who all have indebtedness of between 101 and 121 percent of GDP. Italian debt sits at 144 percent of GDP – and Japan, now the world’s fourth-largest economy after Germany – runs debt of about 260 percent of its annual GDP.

With numbers like that, it’s safe to say Germany is unlikely to have a major debt crisis anytime soon.

READ ALSO: Scholz defends spending as budget crisis rocks Germany

What about Germans in their private life?

You won’t have to look very far to find debt aversion at all levels of German life. Whether it’s the constitutional debt brake or in everyday life.

Nick Mulder, Co-Founder and CEO of Hypofriend – a German-based mortgage broker that caters specifically to expats – says the German cultural fear of taking on debt is one of the many reasons why Germany has one of the lowest home ownership rates anywhere in Europe.

Less than half of people in Germany own their own homes, compared to about two-thirds in the UK, France, and Sweden.

“Germans are rather debt-averse, the word debt – ‘Schulden’ – literally means ‘faults’,” he says. 

READ ALSO: Why is German home ownership so low?

The word Schuld can also mean guilt. It simply doesn’t evoke the same positive emotion it might in English if used a certain way – for example, when someone says “I’m in your debt” as a way to express thanks.

The German obsession with using cash also has roots in fear of taking on debt, with many people preferring to be able to count the notes in their wallet order to keep track of their spending better. About 56 percent of people in Germany have a credit card, yet only 29 percent use it regularly. That compares to a global average of 42 percent and around 80 percent in both Denmark and Israel.

Ask an expert: Why is cash still so popular in Germany – and is it changing?

Anyone renting an apartment in Germany for the first time might also have had to learn what a Mietschuldenfreiheitsbescheinigung is – which you get from your previous landlord to certify that you have no debt.

Renting in Germany: What to know about the ‘Mietschuldenfreiheitsbescheinigung’

Where does it come from?

German fear of debt is rooted in cultural traits, but also some deep historical trauma.

Government spending and ballooning debt during the 1920’s Weimar period helped fuel the hyperinflation that German historians still talk about a century later.

Studying that time will bring you across pictures of long lines for bread, with skyrocketing prices for basic goods that financially ruined many households and brought widespread starvation to Germany.

It was against this backdrop that Nazi leader Adolf Hitler was able to gain support, leading many Germans to blame debt-infused spending for laying the conditions for which the Nazis were able to gain power in Germany.

‘Day of fate’: Why November 9th is a crucial date in Germany history

Such historical memories and cultural attitudes came to the fore again during the 2008 financial crisis and the resulting euro crisis – which German newspapers tended to frame for a long time as a Schuldenkrise – or debt crisis – spurred on by overspending in southern EU countries like Greece and Italy.

Many Germans took these financial woes as a warning of what can happen to those who take on too much debt – and the current constitutional debt brake was instituted against this backdrop.

The world has obviously changed a lot since 2009, yet the debt brake – and an overall German aversion to debt – remain as popular and strong as ever.

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INSIDE GERMANY

Inside Germany: Tensions high ahead of elections, Spargeldöner and ‘Barbaras Rhabarberbar’

From alarm over rising attacks on politicians to food creations and a viral German tongue twister, here's what we're talking about in Germany this week.

Inside Germany: Tensions high ahead of elections, Spargeldöner and 'Barbaras Rhabarberbar'

Inside Germany is our weekly look at some of the news, talking points and gossip in Germany that you might not have heard about. It’s published each Saturday and members can receive it directly to their inbox by going to their newsletter preferences or adding their email to the sign-up box in this article.

Olaf Scholz urges vote for democracy amid attacks

People in Germany will head to the polls for the European elections on June 9th. Although the run-up to elections can always be heated, this year there’s a more sinister atmosphere in Germany. Several politicians and campaigners have been attacked – some violently – raising concerns about the safety of public officials and bringing up memories of Germany’s past. 

READ ALSO: Why are politicians in Germany facing increasing attacks?

Among the incidents have been a serious assault on Matthias Ecke, the head of the Social Democrats’ European election list in the Saxony region. He was set upon by a group of youths while putting up election posters in Dresden last Friday. According to reports in German media, the four teenage attackers are thought to have links to the far-right group known as “Elblandrevolte”.

A few days later on Tuesday afternoon, the former Berlin mayor Franziska Giffey, also from the SPD, was hit on the head and neck with a bag in a library in Berlin. The increase in both verbal assaults and violence has led to calls for tougher action against people who target politicians. 

GERMANY-POLITICS-VIOLENCE-PARTIES

An election poster showing Germany’s Social Democratic Party SPD lead candidate Matthias Ecke for the upcoming European Parliament elections on Schandauer Strasse in the city district of Striesen in Dresden, eastern Germany on May 4th, 2024. Photo by: JENS SCHLUETER / AFP

Chancellor Olaf Scholz, of the SPD, said in a podcast released on Thursday that these “attacks on our democracy concern us all. He added: “That’s why we can’t stand idly by when our public officials, campaigners or volunteers are brutally attacked. When campaign posters for the European elections are destroyed…The answer that each of us can give is very simple – go vote.”

READ ALSO: How to register in Germany to vote in the 2024 European elections

Would you try an asparagus kebab?

The German love of Spargel or asparagus knows no bounds. But have you tried asparagus with another German favourite – the Döner kebab?  ‘Döner Beelitzer Art’ is the name of the creation from chef Felix Schneider from the restaurant ‘Kebap with attitude’ in Berlin-Mitte. White asparagus sourced from Brandenburg town Beelitz is served in flatbread with grilled beef, lettuce, hollandaise sauce, strawberry-ginger jam and wild garlic mayonnaise. It’s a more up-market take on the well-known classic street food – and it will set you back €14.90. Managing director Deniz Buchholz said the restaurant was inspired to bring together German and Turkish cuisine. “It has been a passion project for years to bring the two cultures, Beelitz asparagus and kebab, together,” he said.

Readers in Bavaria may be aware of another spot that’s been serving up asparagus kebabs for a while. Elif Gül has been making Spargeldöner in the town of Abensberg in Lower Bavaria for around five years. Gül serves it in the classic way with kebab meat and salad. There is also hollandaise sauce and “just a little onion so that the asparagus flavour is not masked”, Gül says. Abensberg is a well-known asparagus region and this particular kebab is very popular, according to Gül.

The Döner also appeared in the news this week in another capacity – The Left party (Die Linke) are calling for a price cap for the delicacy or a Dönerpreisbremse in the face of rising living costs. The party reportedly wants to see kebab prices capped at €4.90 and €2.90 for schoolchildren. They also want to see price caps on rent, gas and grocery items. 

The German tongue twister going viral on TikTok

Apologies in advance because you are going to get this song stuck in your head (if you haven’t already). On TikTok and Instagram, people around the world are dancing to a German tongue twister, and millions are watching. The song – called ‘Barbaras Rhabarberbar’ (Barbara’s Rhubarb Bar) was written by cabaret artist Bodo Wartke and turned into a rap song at the end of 2023 with the help of Marti Fischer. Now it appears almost everyone, including celebrities, is trying the Barbaras Rhabarberbar dance. 

If dancing isn’t your thing, the tongue-in-cheek song – about a woman named Barbara and her rhubarb cakes – is one to try and sing along to if you’re practicing your German pronunciation (it’s very difficult). 

Wartke, who received the German Language Prize from the Henning Kaufmann Foundation in 2023, already became an internet hit a few months ago with his own version of the tongue twister ‘Der dicke Dachdecker deckt das Dach’. (The fat roofer covers the roof). In an interview with Stern magazine, he described his current success as an “absolute fluke”, adding: “We just wanted to have a bit of fun.”

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