BUDGET REVIEW: GERMANY
OECD JOURNAL ON BUDGETING – VOLUME 2014/2 © OECD 2015
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that analyses such as those provided in the Sustainability Report over the years have
played a role in this development. The reports give a clear message about the impact of
demographic and other factors and of the scale of policy action that is required over several
parliaments (or “legislative periods” as they are referred to in Germany). On the other hand,
the acknowledged importance of the topic is not matched by the attention that is accorded
to the Sustainability Report and its findings; the document appears to be viewed as a
worthy official study rather than a major fiscal reporting event such as the annual budget.
To address this
shortcoming, and command greater engagement of policy-makers, the
existing strengths in the report should be built upon. The risk of identifying “long-term”
problems is that policy-makers may regard the solutions as something to be likewise
addressed over the long-term, rather than factored into current budgetary plans. This risk
is perhaps accentuated by explicitly assuming – as the report does – that the government’s
medium-term plan will be adhered to, and confining itself to policy variants beyond that
horizon. Through this approach, politicians and senior bureaucrats may be receiving an
unintended signal that the policy messages contained in the
report are not relevant for
them, but for the generation of policy-makers who will succeed them. It is also notable that
there is at present no requirement on line ministries, or on the government as a whole, to
respond to the report or to devise strategies to close the sustainability gaps identified.
As regards the policy priorities themselves, there is scope to sharpen these and make
them more relevant. The sensitivity analysis conducted by the Federal Ministry of Finance is
useful for explaining the differences between the T+ and T- policy variants, and some policy
messages may be inferred from these. However, it would be wrong to confine an analysis of
long-term sustainability policy to the options emerging from such a technical analysis: there
are undoubtedly a range
of other policy factors which, while not relevant to the T+/T-
distinction, would nevertheless impact significantly on long-term debt trends. The
population health analysis, which is dealt with summarily in the report, is one good example
of such a policy option; other options would arise in other social and economic areas. A
Sustainability Report might have more direct impact as a tool of fiscal policy if it a) provided
a more comprehensive – and perhaps politically uncomfortable – menu of policy options
which would have a significant bearing upon long-term sustainability, and b) linked in to the
Financial Plan, and thus to the budgeting process itself, in a more direct way.
One way of addressing these issues would be to present the Sustainability Report in the
future not as a purely Federal Ministry of Finance publication, but as a whole of government
publication in which line ministries are expected to present policy responses (as is already
the case in the sustainability chapter of the annual Stability Programme),
or at least policy
options, that would have a bearing upon long-term sustainability. By presenting the Report
at a suitable juncture in the annual budget process – for example in March (as the Federal
Ministry of Finance did with the 2014 interim update), alongside the government’s technical
Benchmark Decision, or shortly thereafter alongside the annual Stability Programme – the
way could be opened for these policy messages to have an impact on the budget process
itself before the draft budget is presented to parliament in August.
The option of conducting the long-term sustainability analysis alongside a periodic
spending review process, and integrating the process within the mainstream of fiscal
policy-making via that route, is discussed in Box 10 above.
Separately, it should be noted that the MOF also produces a Subsidy Report which
assesses the full extent and nature of the state’s support for various sectors.