The government is considering whether to suspend Germany's constitutionally enshrined debt brake as a way out of the spending crunch, a source told Reuters, while a leading member of Scholz's own party also called for such a move.
Habeck said he was not proposing to abolish Germany's constitutionally enshrined debt brake, but added that "it is inflexible".
We are now being forced to modernize the economy with fewer public subsidies," he told the Bild am Sonntag newspaper.
"Rather, it is the unsound and unconstitutional budget policy of the federal government and the (three-way) coalition.
"One possibility could be to suspend the debt brake in 2023 ... but then not in 2024.
Persons:
Robert Habeck, Minister Christian Lindner, Chancellor Olaf Scholz's, Germany's, Lindner, Habeck, Sebastian Brehm, Markus Wacket, Christian Kraemer, Matthias Williams, Miranda Murray, Ed Osmond, Paul Simao
Organizations:
Minister, Reuters, Greens, Free Democrats, CDU, CSU, Thomson
Locations:
United States