Business

Germany balances budget for 2nd straight year in 2015

Germany balances budget for 2nd straight year in 2015

By ASSOCIATED PRESS

German Chancellor Angela Merkel arrives for the weekly cabinet meeting at the Chancellery in Berlin, Germany November 18, 2015. Merkel and her top ministers will hold a special meeting on security issues on Wednesday after an international soccer match was cancelled on Tuesday evening on fears of a planned attack, two government sources said. REUTERS/Hannibal Hanschke

BERLIN: The Germany government says it has balanced its budget for the second consecutive year in 2015. Chancellor Angela Merkel's conservative party has made ending new borrowing a key plank of its economic policy. The government was able to do without new borrowing in 2014, a year earlier than planned, for the first time since 1969. The Finance Ministry said Wednesday it recorded a surplus of 12.1 billion euros ($13.1 billion) last year, up from 5 billion euros in 2014. Spending totaled 299.3 billion euros, slightly below the previous year's 301.9 billion euros. Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble says the surplus will be needed to finance spending on accommodating and integrating refugees. He added: 'We want, if possible, to get by without new debt this year as well.'