Germany is preparing to launch a €100 billion investment fund aimed at securing strategic sectors including defense, energy, and critical raw materials. This move comes amid ongoing economic challenges, with the German economy contracting by 0.1% in the second quarter of 2025 due to weak investment. The country is also projected to run budget deficits exceeding 4% of GDP through 2032, marking the largest and longest sustained deficits in its post-war history. These developments raise concerns about Germany's fiscal trajectory and the potential need for measures such as quantitative easing to manage the growing debt burden.
Relance budgétaire allemande : à quelle vitesse les dépenses augmenteront-elles ? https://t.co/EvAEGgjRlc
⚠️Recession in Germany continues: German economy CONTRACTED -0.1% in Q2 2025 from the previous quarter, driven by an investment weakness. The German economy has shrunk in 6 out of the last 11 quarters. Economic malaise is an understatement..👇 https://t.co/fBHVVTZgG9
🚨 Germany is heading into DEBT SPIRAL: Germany is projected to run deficits of over 4% of GDP through 2032. That would mark the largest and longest sustained deficits in post-war history. Who’s going to absorb all this new debt? Is QE coming?👇 https://t.co/fBHVVTZgG9