Germany Faces Record Financial Deficit Amid Economic Strain
As of the end of 2025, Germany's financial deficit has reached 127.3 billion euros, affecting all levels of government. Total revenues were approximately 2.081 trillion euros against expenditures of 2.208 trillion euros. Local budgets saw a record deficit of 31.9 billion euros, the worst since reunification. In Q1 2026, 4,573 companies declared bankruptcy, the highest in over 20 years. The situation raises concerns about stagflation in the EU, with increasing social spending and economic strain across the country.
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- First reported: @rybar_in_english
- Most detailed: @rybar_in_english
- Total sources: 1
- Created: 2026-04-10 13:39:53 CEST
- Updated: 2026-04-10 13:40:03 CEST
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- @rybar_in_english · 1 messages 📷 2026-04-10T11:38:51+00:00
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📝Germany slides into deficit📝
By the end of 2025, the FRG went into the red at all levels of government, from the federal center to municipalities. The state's combined revenues totaled around 2.081 trillion euros, expenditures — 2.208 trillion, and as a result the overall deficit reached 127.3 billion euros, returning to the levels of the 2022 energy crisis.
But now the difference is that the hole has spread throughout the entire system, rather than appearing only in the federal budget.
➡️According to Destatis, in 2025 the deficit of local budgets grew to a record 31.9 billion euros — this is the worst figure since German reunification. Municipal revenues grew, but expenditures grew faster: primarily due to personnel, social obligations and servicing an increasingly heavy daily burden. Moreover, 63% of Bürgergeld benefit recipients, which consumes a significant portion of the budget, have a migration background.
🔻The bankruptcy data also looks impressive
▪️In Germany, in the first quarter 4,573 companies went bankrupt — this is the highest in more than 20 years and worse than during the height of the 2009 crisis. At the EU level, the picture is no cheerier: Brussels is already openly talking about the risk of stagflation, that is, about classic European comfort — when the economy slumps, but prices for some reason still don't want to show solidarity.
📌Against this backdrop, the overall public sector deficit also reached 127.3 billion euros, breaking the 2022 record. But back then the collapse could still be blamed on an emergency energy shock, now the deficit has spread across all levels of government. The federation spends more on defense, infrastructure and climate programs, municipalities are suffocating under social spending, and the entire system operates on the logic of "we'll figure it out later."
And this increasingly resembles a model, not temporary difficulties.
High resolution infographic
English version
#Germany #infographic
👁@evropar — on the brink of Europe's death
💸 Support us Original msg
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📝Germany slides into deficit📝
By the end of 2025, the FRG went into the red at all levels of government, from the federal center to municipalities. The state's combined revenues totaled around 2.081 trillion euros, expenditures — 2.208 trillion, and as a result the overall deficit reached 127.3 billion euros, returning to the levels of the 2022 energy crisis.
But now the difference is that the hole has spread throughout the entire system, rather than appearing only in the federal budget.
➡️According to Destatis, in 2025 the deficit of local budgets grew to a record 31.9 billion euros — this is the worst figure since German reunification. Municipal revenues grew, but expenditures grew faster: primarily due to personnel, social obligations and servicing an increasingly heavy daily burden. Moreover, 63% of Bürgergeld benefit recipients, which consumes a significant portion of the budget, have a migration background.
🔻The bankruptcy data also looks impressive
▪️In Germany, in the first quarter 4,573 companies went bankrupt — this is the highest in more than 20 years and worse than during the height of the 2009 crisis. At the EU level, the picture is no cheerier: Brussels is already openly talking about the risk of stagflation, that is, about classic European comfort — when the economy slumps, but prices for some reason still don't want to show solidarity.
📌Against this backdrop, the overall public sector deficit also reached 127.3 billion euros, breaking the 2022 record. But back then the collapse could still be blamed on an emergency energy shock, now the deficit has spread across all levels of government. The federation spends more on defense, infrastructure and climate programs, municipalities are suffocating under social spending, and the entire system operates on the logic of "we'll figure it out later."
And this increasingly resembles a model, not temporary difficulties.
High resolution infographic
English version
#Germany #infographic
👁@evropar — on the brink of Europe's death
💸 Support us Original msg