Skip to content

Recent Posts

  • Taxgirl Goes To The Movies: Star Wars
  • Looking For Tax Breaks?
  • Taxgirl Goes Back To The Movies In 2025
  • Here’s What You Need To Know About Submitting Tax Questions
  • Looking For More Great Tax Content?

Most Used Categories

  • individual (1,314)
  • politics (862)
  • IRS news/announcements (753)
  • tax policy (582)
  • ask the taxgirl (543)
  • prosecutions, felonies and misdemeanors (479)
  • just for fun (478)
  • state & local (403)
  • pop culture (399)
  • charitable organizations (389)
Skip to content

Taxgirl

Because paying taxes is painful… but reading about them shouldn’t be.

  • About Taxgirl
  • Info
    • My Disclaimer
    • A Word (or More) About Your Privacy
    • Subscribe
  • Ask The Taxgirl
  • Comments
  • Taxgirl Podcast
    • Podcast Season 1
    • Podcast Season 2
    • Podcast Season 3
  • Contact
  • Home
  • 2009
  • September
  • 28
  • Merkel Wins 2nd Term In Germany, Touts Tax Cuts

Merkel Wins 2nd Term In Germany, Touts Tax Cuts

Kelly Phillips ErbSeptember 28, 2009May 17, 2020

“Lesen Sie es von meinen Lippen ab, keine neuen Steuern.”
(translation: Read my lips, no new taxes.)

Okay, maybe German Chancellor Angela Merkel didn’t actually say that – but that was the gist of her message when she made a play for a second term. And it worked.

With Germany suffering through its own economic woes, taxes were a big issue in the current elections. Merkel’s opposition dug in their heels over a scheme to raise taxes on the top wage earners (hmm…. where have we heard that before?). As a result, the SPD (the party of Steinmeier, Merkel’s challenger) suffered its biggest loss since World War II.

Merkel, on the other hand, promised across-the-board tax cuts of 15 billion euros ($22 billion), claiming that she wants to be the “Chancellor for all Germans.” She also claimed that she would cut the lowest tax rate from 14% to 12% – it is 10% in the US – and raise the threshold to qualify for the top tax rate to 60,000 euros (roughly $87,774) from 40,000 euros ($58,516) – the top rate in the US hits at $372,950 for singles. Those strategies helped her win for her party, the Christian Democratic Union, together with their sister party in Bavaria, the Christian Social Union.

Of course, “win” is relative. Voter turn out was a record low and Merkel’s own party saw its worst “victory” in post-war voting. Many blame a bleak economy for the turnout.

As in the US, critics are calling Merkel’s plans for tax cuts dangerous, noting that Germany plans to double their foreign debt next year to record levels. Nonetheless, Merkel and her party believe that the cuts will spur the economy forward.

She will face at least one challenge: consensus. She owes part of her victory to the Free Democrat party, currently led by Guido Westerwelle. Westerwelle wants even more severe tax cuts than Merkel has promised. Taxes could prove to be something of a sticking point for the two moving forward. Heinrich Oberreuter, a political science professor at the University of Passau, has predicted that taxes will be “the Achilles’ heel of the Free Democrats and the (new) coalition as a whole,” claiming that tax cuts just aren’t possible in the current economic climate.

I guess we’ll see… In the meantime, the euro is expected to jump today on the news.

Facebooktwitterlinkedinmail
author avatar
Kelly Phillips Erb
Kelly Phillips Erb is a tax attorney, tax writer, and podcaster.
See Full Bio
social network icon social network icon
Germany, tax cuts

Post navigation

Previous: Ask The Taxgirl: Sleep & More
Next: Ask The Taxgirl: Stimulus Checks In 2009

Related Posts

What CEOs Think About The Economy and New Challenges Ahead

March 8, 2022March 8, 2022 John Luckenbaugh
gas pumps

A Look at the (Very) Unpopular Federal Gas Tax

February 17, 2022March 2, 2022 Kelly Phillips Erb

The OECD Global Minimum Tax Deal: What to Expect

January 11, 2022January 25, 2022 John Luckenbaugh

One thought on “Merkel Wins 2nd Term In Germany, Touts Tax Cuts”

  1. vibaku says:
    September 29, 2009 at 2:48 am

    Merkel has reluctantly agree to expanding insurance of bank deposits, she did sign a stimulus plan, but as criticized the US for the overly large one that we have enacted and criticized Obama for planning further stimulus plans.

    She has stated her plan for further Free-Market reforms in Germany. Historically, she has supported reducing the VAT and substituting a flat tax. While German coalition politics have forced her to compromise some of those views her core positions are for fiscal restraint. She has been closer to Bush than Obama in her Middle East policy.

    This was not a win for Obama, and unlike CNN’s reporting it does not show a weakening f her position, but rather she is stronger because she is able to take on a more conservative coalition partner than she had previously.

    Reply

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

© 2005-2022, Kelly Phillips Erb | Theme: BlockWP by Candid Themes.
Skip to content
Open toolbar Accessibility Tools

Accessibility Tools

  • Increase TextIncrease Text
  • Decrease TextDecrease Text
  • GrayscaleGrayscale
  • High ContrastHigh Contrast
  • Negative ContrastNegative Contrast
  • Light BackgroundLight Background
  • Links UnderlineLinks Underline
  • Readable FontReadable Font
  • Reset Reset
  • SitemapSitemap
  • FeedbackFeedback