Germany’s Nightmare Becomes Reality as EU Acquires Taste for Debt
For decades, Germany has stood as the European Union’s foremost opponent to joint borrowing—staunch in its belief that Eurozone stability required fiscal discipline and that any move toward mutualizing debt posed both economic and political risks. Yet, recent policy shifts and mounting economic challenges have triggered a dramatic change in the EU’s approach to debt, leaving Berlin increasingly isolated and facing a transformation in the Union’s fiscal landscape.
The Paradigm Shift: From Reluctance to Embrace
The shift began in earnest with the economic fallout from the COVID-19 pandemic. In 2020, the European Commission launched ‘NextGenerationEU,’ an €806.9 billion recovery fund financed largely through the issuance of joint EU bonds. The move was unprecedented, marking the first time the bloc agreed to issue large-scale common debt to support recovery efforts—breaking a long-held taboo in German fiscal doctrine.
The rationale for this momentous change was clear: without a massive, coordinated fiscal intervention, the EU risked a deep and lasting recession. Germany, then under Chancellor Angela Merkel, reluctantly backed NextGenerationEU, recognizing the existential threat posed by the pandemic, but signaled its support was strictly a one-off measure.
Growing Appetite for Joint Debt
Fast-forward to 2024, and the EU’s taste for common borrowing has only grown. As the Union faces new challenges—from the war in Ukraine to increased investment needs in energy, defense, and digital transformation—calls for new forms of joint financing have become louder, particularly from France, Italy, Spain, and European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen.
A July 2024 Eurobarometer survey found that 57% of EU citizens now support some form of collective borrowing for strategic investments, reflecting shifting public sentiment in favor of deeper economic integration.
The European Commission has since floated proposals for additional rounds of common EU bonds to fund defense initiatives and accelerate the green transition. These ideas have gained traction amid heightened geopolitical uncertainty and rising borrowing costs for individual member states—pressures that test the existing fiscal framework devised by Berlin and Brussels in the aftermath of the Eurozone crisis.
Germany’s Growing Discomfort
This transformation has generated consternation within the German political establishment. The country’s influential “debt brake” (Schuldenbremse), enshrined in its constitution, restricts federal deficit spending and is seen both as an economic safeguard and a symbol of the country’s postwar fiscal prudence. German policymakers argue that mutualizing debt risks creating ‘free-rider’ problems, undermining incentives for budgetary discipline in ambitious member states.
German Finance Minister Christian Lindner (FDP) has repeatedly called on the EU to respect prior agreements—in particular, that NextGenerationEU was a one-off solution, not a precedent for ongoing joint fiscal operations. In a June 2024 Bundestag address, Lindner warned: “Germany cannot and will not accept a slippery slope towards a debt union. It threatens both the stability of the euro and the principle of national responsibility.”
Nevertheless, Germany’s leverage appears to be waning. The post-pandemic political calculus in Europe favors solidarity and collective action. Southern EU economies, hard hit by both COVID-19 and the energy shock stemming from Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, argue that joint borrowing is essential to avoid fragmentation and to boost investment where national budgets are stretched to their limits.
Raising the Stakes in Brussels
At the EU level, intense debate rages over the future of common borrowing and the larger question of fiscal integration. The European Parliament and several heavyweight member states are pushing to make shared debt a permanent feature of the Union’s policy toolkit—something the German government is resisting with renewed vigor.
The stakes are high: with NextGenerationEU funds due to run out by 2026, Europe must decide whether to develop new funding mechanisms to meet its investment and security goals. The outcome of these debates could determine the future of the Stability and Growth Pact, the balance of power within EU economic governance, and ultimately, whether the eurozone moves closer to a fiscal union.
The Economic Reality: Risks and Opportunities
Supporters of EU-level debt emphasize the advantages of stronger, more coordinated investment, which could drive competitiveness in sectors from defense to clean energy and artificial intelligence. The European Investment Bank (EIB) reports that every euro invested in joint EU projects returns 1.5 in GDP growth—a persuasive figure as the continent faces slower growth and increased global competition.
But critics, especially in Germany, highlight risks: common debt could expose all member states to the fiscal mistakes of weaker economies, inflate moral hazard, and ultimately create rifts among countries with diverging fiscal philosophies. Recent economic modeling from the German Council of Economic Experts warns that without strong governance and oversight mechanisms, permanent mutualization may undermine confidence in the euro and raise the EU’s funding costs.
What Lies Ahead?
The coming months will be pivotal. A European Commission white paper due for autumn 2024 will map out policy options for common borrowing beyond 2026, just as member states gear up for the next multiannual financial framework negotiations. Meanwhile, German politicians are under increasing pressure both at home and in Brussels to defend the nation’s fiscal red lines—even as the winds of change gust ever more strongly through the halls of EU policymaking.
In the words of Dirk Schumacher, top European economist at Natixis, “The genie is out of the bottle. Whatever Germany’s reservations, the reality is that joint EU debt has become a structural part of European financial policy. The question now is not if, but how, the EU will manage this new era of fiscal integration.”
For Germany, that realization presents both a nightmare and an impetus for strategic adaptation. As Europe faces what may be its most consequential financial crossroads in decades, only one thing is certain: the continent’s economic future will be shaped not by national doctrines, but by the evolving logic of shared crisis, ambition, and destiny.

