http://www.dw-world.de/dw/article/0,,4044019,00.html

*German Parliament Approves 50-Billion-Euro Stimulus Plan
*

The upper house of parliament on Friday approved the German government's
50-billion- euro ($63 billion) economic stimulus plan aimed to lift the
German economy out of its worst recession since World War II.

Approved on Friday, Feb. 20, the plan includes investments in
infrastructure, tax relief, reductions in health care contributions and
money for families with children. The package also includes a 2,500-euro
bonus to people who junk old cars to buy new vehicles.

The upper house, which represents Germany's 16 states, approved the new plan
after its first package was met with criticism both in Germany and abroad.
The old plan called for a stimulus of 31 billion euros and was considered
too cautious.

Germany's Conservative Chancellor Angela Merkel was full of praise for the
new initiative, being touted as a "pact for Germany," which her coalition
passed on Tuesday, Jan. 11

Merkel has said that her government is doing "everything possible so that
Germany does not just overcome this crisis, but emerges from it stronger."

Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier from Merkel's junior coalition
partner, the Social Democrats, said the German package of investments,
government loans and hand-outs, and tax cuts, compared favorably with
stimulus measures taken by other nations.

"When I look around Europe, I can't see anyone else doing more or taking
better steps than we are," he told reporters.

A historic package for an historic slump

With demand for the country's exports crippled by the global financial
crisis, Germany's economy entered a recession last year and is expected to
shrink by more than two percent this year – marking its worst performance
postwar.

The new measures also include 100 billion euros in loan guarantees but the
business daily newspaper Handelsblatt reported on Friday that the amount
will be insufficient based on preliminary requests alone.

"If we approved all the applications that have been submitted unofficially,
the 100 billion euros would be insufficient," a source told the newspaper.

New plan means massive debt

The approved stimulus plan will also force Germany to take on about 37
billion euros in new debt, a fact that displeases the Association of German
Taxpayers.

In an official statement, Association President Karl Heinz Daeke called the
measures a "smokescreen to distract from [the absence of] true tax relief."

He also criticized the government premium of 2,500 euros to be paid to
people who scrap their old cars and buy new ones, saying the auto industry
would have benefited more from direct tax cuts.


DW Staff (ls)


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