Europe | German taxes

Steep and cold progression

Flush with tax revenues, Germany considers ending bracket creep

|BERLIN

THANKS mainly to low unemployment, Germany keeps exceeding tax forecasts, with receipts that other European countries must envy. Last year state revenues totalled €620 billion ($860 billion); by 2017 they will pass €700 billion. This bounty is letting Germany balance its federal budget in 2015 for the first time in 46 years. But wouldn’t it make sense, if not to cut taxes, at least to end underhand tax rises?

Bracket creep, or what the Germans call “cold progression”, results when pay rises only compensate for inflation but still push their recipients into a higher tax bracket. The effect is that taxpayers can buy less with their net income. Given steeply progressive tax rates, even middle-income Germans face such opaque and automatic tax rises every year.

In her previous term, Chancellor Angela Merkel tried to fix bracket creep but failed in the upper-house Bundesrat, where the centre-left Social Democrats (SPD) had a majority. But now Mrs Merkel is in a “grand coalition” with the same Social Democrats. Sigmar Gabriel, the SPD’s boss as well as minister of energy and the economy, said this week that he could imagine indexing tax thresholds even without raising other taxes to make up for lost revenues, estimated at €6 billion ($8.3 billion) a year.

He immediately got an earful from his party’s left-wingers. In its 2013 campaign, the SPD ran on a platform of raising, not cutting, taxes. As for most of its 151-year history, the party’s leftist argument was that taking more from the rich is necessary not just to pay for public spending but also to counter rising inequality. During the coalition bargaining with Mrs Merkel the SPD had to drop its demands. But if there is now talk of ending bracket creep, the left says, higher rates or estate taxes must also be on the table.

Germany could choose instead to phase out subsidies that disproportionately benefit the rich. But neither Mrs Merkel’s centre-right lot nor the SPD have shown much interest in that. As they emerged from a pow-wow on April 29th, parliamentary leaders announced that no changes were planned for now.

This article appeared in the Europe section of the print edition under the headline "Steep and cold progression"

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