Germany’s generous support for companies hit by the coronavirus crisis can’t go on indefinitely, Economy Minister Peter Altmaier said on Thursday, warning of stricter rules to come from January.

A day after Chancellor Angela Merkel announced that Germany’s current shutdowns would last until January 10, Altmaier told broadcaster NTV that the massive aid pledged to help firms through November and December “cannot continue endlessly”.

Merkel’s traditionally frugal government has pledged over a trillion euros in aid to shield German workers and companies from the pandemic fallout, among the biggest rescue packages in Europe.

But Altmaier said it was wrong to think “the state can spend money without limits”.

A second coronavirus wave forced Germany to introduce another round of restrictions in November, shutting down bars, restaurants and hotels as well as cultural and leisure centres.

Businesses hit by the closures are entitled to claim aid amounting to up to 75 per cent of their revenues for November and December 2019, expected to cost the government some €30 billion.

Businesses hit by the closures are entitled to claim aid amounting to up to 75 per cent of their revenues for November and December 2019, expected to cost the government some €30 billion

But from January, Altmaier said, the aid will once again be more targeted and largely focussed on reimbursing firms for their fixed business costs such as office rent or car and insurance payments.

Merkel late on Wednesday also said that support for German firms could “not continue as in November and December”.

Altmaier urged Germans to “take a realistic view of the situation”. 

“When you’re going through one of the worst recessions since World War II, a lot of people are going to pay a price. 

“We can make it easier,” he said. “But we cannot absorb the decline in economic activity and pretend nothing has happened.”

The government plans to borrow more than €300 billion in 2020 and 2021 to combat the pandemic impact, blasting through its constitutionally enshrined “debt brake”. It expects to return to its usual fiscal rigour in 2022.

Echoing Altmaier, lawmaker Eckhardt Rehberg, the budgetary expert from Merkel’s conservative CDU party, on Thursday said the government “does not have bottomless pockets”.

The goal to restore the “debt brake” – which limits new borrowing to 0.35 per cent of gross domestic product – in 2022 is “ambitious enough,” he told Deutschlandfunk radio.

Germany anticipates that the economy will shrink by 5.5 per cent in 2020 before rebounding next year, a less painful recession than other European countries are forecasting.

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