Germany's Merz cools hopes for another debt brake reform
EWG•Commission proposals and earlier timeline
The commission started its work in September of last year and is expected to deliver "at least two, possibly even three different ideas and proposals" to the government, instead of one single unified proposal as other commissions of experts have done.
Initially, the second reform of the debt brake was expected to be completed by the end of 2025.
Merz says another reform is unlikely this term
German Chancellor Friedrich Merz on Wednesday all but ruled out another reform of the debt brake during this parliamentary term, the first time he has spoken so clearly about the prospects for changing the borrowing limit.
"The hurdles for another amendment to the debt brake are extremely high," Merz said. "In that respect, I am not very confident that we will manage to set another amendment to the debt brake in motion during this government's term."
Any change would need broad parliamentary support
The debt brake is enshrined in the constitution, and any change would require a two-thirds majority in both chambers of parliament, the Bundestag and Bundesrat, meaning the coalition would need support from opposition lawmakers.
Even within the coalition, there is not a unified position on the topic, Merz said.
The government included in its coalition agreement the establishment of an expert commission to develop a proposal for modernising the debt brake, which restricts public borrowing to 0.35% of gross domestic product.
Merz acknowledges credibility hit after first reform
Before the 2025 federal election, Merz had promised not to undermine the debt brake.




