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COLUMN-Maybe government spending isn't so bad after all: McGeever
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COLUMN-Maybe government spending isn't so bad after all: McGeever
Mar 5, 2025 1:20 PM

(The opinions expressed here are those of the author, a

columnist for Reuters.)

By Jamie McGeever

ORLANDO, Florida, March 5 (Reuters) - It has been an

extraordinary 24 hours for government spending.

Germany has given the green light for an unprecedented

fiscal splurge worth 1 trillion euros that has been warmly

welcomed by the market, at the same time investors are becoming

increasingly anxious about the tightening purse strings on the

other side of the Atlantic.

This fiscal binge is coming not during an economic crisis

like the pandemic recession in 2020, the Global Financial Crisis

of 2008 or euro zone debt crisis in 2011-12. German growth may

have ground to a halt, but there is no economic panic.

The fiscal taps are being opened, in large part, because of

a shifting geopolitical order, as President Donald Trump's

ambivalence toward the continent has exposed Europe's security

vulnerabilities.

In response, Germany's likely incoming Chancellor Friedrich

Merz has proposed the biggest spending spree since reunification

in 1990. Defense and infrastructure outlays could amount to

roughly 1 trillion euros, or 20% of GDP, and Berlin is also set

to relax its 'debt brake' fiscal rule that has long hampered

government expenditure.

There are several layers of irony in the stunning proposals

from Germany, which has long been synonymous with

inflation-fearing fiscal conservatism at home and vehement

opposition to perceived budgetary 'indiscipline' across the euro

zone.

But Berlin's shackles are off, and governments across Europe

are likely to follow suit, increasing spending on defense and

other sectors, giving the region an even greater fiscal boost.

US ON OPPOSITE PATH

The approach to public spending is quite different in

Washington, where Trump has given Elon Musk carte blanche to

take a chainsaw to the U.S. federal budget. Private sector good,

public sector bad.

Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent insists that the seemingly

robust U.S. economy is "brittle" under the surface because GDP

has been artificially enhanced by the previous administration's

fiscal largesse.

And on Sunday, Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick said

government spending has historically "messed" with GDP and

should be stripped from GDP figures altogether. This would be a

complete rejection of standard practice since the 1940s, but

given some of the Trump administration's other radical

proposals, it's certainly possible.

While Lutnick's comments are probably ill-advised, Bessent

may have a point. Total government spending in 2023 and 2024,

including federal, state, and local government, rose 3.9% and

3.4%, respectively, meaning it did play a large role in helping

the U.S. achieve real GDP growth of 2.9% and 2.8%, respectively,

in the past two years.

But even if this growth was supported by fiscal spending, it

was still strong and has helped keep unemployment anchored near

its lowest levels in over half a century.

THUMBS UP

How are markets reacting to the news from Berlin? They're

loving it.

Germany's Dax leaped 3.4% on Wednesday for its best day in

nearly two and a half years, and the euro's rise brought its

gains this week close to 4%. A host of global investment banks

have raised their euro forecasts and upgraded their outlook for

German and euro zone growth.

True, with a budget deficit of under 3% of GDP and debt

worth 63% of GDP, Germany has far more 'fiscal space' than the

U.S., with its 6% deficit and 120% debt.

The positive equity and currency market reaction to Berlin's

moves makes sense, although soaring euro zone bond yields and

negative swap spreads point to some investor caution around the

spending splurge.

But overall, markets are showing that government has an

important part to play in making growth great again.

(The opinions expressed here are those of the author, a

columnist for Reuters.)

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