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Merz unveils €10 billion in tax relief: Germany's budgetary awakening changes the ECB equation

Ongoing story : ECB: Monetary Policy and Fed/ECB Divergence· Part 7/7

MacroSubscribers only Jul 2, 2026 at 16:369Add to bookmarks

Merz unveils €10 billion in tax relief: Germany's budgetary awakening changes the ECB equation
Illustration : Anouk Verhoeven

Germany's budgetary golden rule gives way. 10 billion euros in tax relief, a decision that reshuffles the cards between Berlin, Frankfurt, and the European bond markets.

Context

Germany is going through its worst growth phase since 2009: two consecutive years of GDP contraction, a composite PMI at an 18-month low in June 2026, and an industry in structural recession. Chancellor Friedrich Merz is responding with a €10 billion tax relief plan—a break from the Schuldenbremse, the fiscal dogma that had so far paralyzed Berlin in the face of the industrial competitiveness crisis.

Data

  • Merz Plan: €10 billion in tax relief (≈ 0.25% of German GDP 2026, estimated at €3,960 billion)
  • German composite PMI June 2026: 18-month low (S&P Global)
  • German GDP 2025: -0.2% (second consecutive annual contraction, Destatis)
  • Fed/ECB divergence: ~250 bps; ECB target ~1.75% by end-2026
  • 10-year Bund yield (pre-announcement): ~2.6%
  • Estimated structural investment deficit: €400+ billion over ten years (Ifo Institut 2025)

Analysis

The mechanism is twofold: accelerated tax deductions for industrial SMEs (capex, R&D) and measures to support private investment. This ideological pivot—German fiscal orthodoxy yielding to the risk of deindustrialization—alters a key variable in the ECB’s equation.

A fiscal stimulus in Berlin reduces pressure on Frankfurt to accelerate rate cuts. However, €10 billion remains modest compared to the €400+ billion structural deficit: the ECB will likely maintain its trajectory (~1.75% by end-2026), with expectations of aggressive cuts moderating if PMIs show signs of recovery. In markets, Bunds could rise by +10 to 20 bps, and European cyclicals may benefit from selective re-rating.

Probability-weighted scenarios

  • Base (50%): PMI rises to 48-50 in Q4 2026. ECB cuts by an additional 50 bps. EUR/USD stable around 1.05-1.08. DAX rises by 5-8% by year-end.
  • Bullish (30%): Additional measures passed in autumn. Bund yields toward 2.9-3.1%. EUR/USD >1.10. Significant re-rating of European cyclicals.
  • Bearish (20%): Parliamentary opposition or Karlsruhe Court blocks the package. PMI continues to deteriorate. ECB accelerates cuts, EUR/USD <1.03.

Portfolio implications

Tactical rotation toward European cyclicals (BASF, Siemens) over a 6-9 month horizon. DAX or EuroStoxx 50 ETFs offer diversified exposure. Reduce European bond duration if the bullish scenario materializes.

Risks & blind spots

Key risks


- €10 billion insufficient against a €400+ billion structural underinvestment (uncertain multiplier effect)
- Constitutional risk: the Karlsruhe Court already invalidated budgets non-compliant with the *Schuldenbremse* in 2023
- Timing and politics: economic impact delayed to 2027, and the CDU/SPD coalition remains weakened over financing

To watch

  • Bundestag vote on the tax package (September 2026)
  • German manufacturing PMI July 2026 (first psychological signal)
  • ECB decision September 2026: revision of the rate trajectory?
  • Reaction of rating agencies (Fitch, Moody's) on Germany’s AAA sovereign rating
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Heinrich VogelÉconomiste macro & banques centrales (Francfort)
Il suit la Fed, la BCE et les grands équilibres macroéconomiques mondiaux.
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Comments (9)

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Cla1re_Lille 03 Jul 2026 · 12:37

10 milliards, c’est un signal, mais est-ce que Berlin va enfin aligner ses actes sur ses discours verts ? Sans ça, ça reste du greenwashing fiscal.

financieel_fanaat 03 Jul 2026 · 12:00

10 miljard is leuk, maar als de helft naar fossiele subsidies lekt, is het gewoon een dure PR-stunt voor de 'Schwarze Null 2.0'.

the_contrarian 03 Jul 2026 · 04:50

10bn in cuts while Berlin still drags its feet on digital infrastructure? Feels like rearranging deck chairs.

Finanz_Fuchs 03 Jul 2026 · 12:04

10 Mrd. Steuerentlastung, aber die Schuldenbremse bleibt heilig - wer soll das denn bitte finanzieren, wenn nicht die nächsten Generationen?

kenji_osaka 03 Jul 2026 · 04:41

10 milliards pour relancer la consommation, mais si les salaires ne suivent pas, c’est comme verser de l’eau dans un seau percé.

EconEddie_89 03 Jul 2026 · 04:35

10bn in tax cuts when energy prices are still biting? Feels like throwing pennies at a house fire.

tessa_london 03 Jul 2026 · 07:21

Tax cuts might ease the pinch now, but if they don’t tackle the root of energy costs, it’s just a band-aid on a broken pipe.

CurioBretagne 03 Jul 2026 · 04:32

10 milliards, c’est bien, mais est-ce que ça suffira à réveiller une consommation qui dort depuis deux ans ? Les ménages allemands ont plus peur du chauffage cet hiver que des taux.

J.P.R. 02 Jul 2026 · 13:22

10bn now, but what’s the plan when tax receipts dip and the deficit balloons? Berlin’s betting on growth like it’s a sure thing.

le_sage_du_nord 02 Jul 2026 · 13:11

10bn in tax cuts while the ECB’s still hiking? Sounds like Berlin’s playing chicken with the bond market. Hope they know what they’re doing.

le_sceptique_financier 02 Jul 2026 · 12:41

Permettez-moi de douter... 10 milliards pour relancer la machine, mais à quel prix pour la crédibilité de la règle d'or ? On a déjà vu la Grèce en 2010, et ça n'a pas fini en pique-nique.

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