German cabinet approves draft budget with over €203B in borrowing, signaling Europe’s fiscal shift

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Germany, long the poster child for fiscal restraint in Europe, just went on a spending spree. The German cabinet approved a draft 2027 federal budget projecting new net borrowing of more than €203 billion ($232 billion).

Total planned spending clocks in at roughly €555.4 billion. Total planned investment across the budget hits €117.5 billion.

The numbers behind the spending pivot

The €203 billion borrowing figure already blew past expectations. Back in April 2026, projections pegged new borrowing at €196.5 billion. The final draft came in roughly €6.5 billion higher.

The borrowing breaks down into three buckets. The core budget accounts for €118.7 billion. An infrastructure fund contributes €54.9 billion. And a special defense fund adds another €30 billion on top.

Defense is where the real story lives. Core defense spending is set to rise to €109.8 billion in 2027, up from €82 billion in 2026. That’s a roughly 34% year-over-year jump. When you include all defense-related outlays, the total reaches €130.1 billion.

Cabinet approval for the budget was scheduled for July 6, 2026. The parliamentary review process is expected to begin in September, with lawmakers aiming for final approval by year’s end.

Germany’s fiscal identity crisis

In 2025, Germany modified its constitutional debt limits and established a €500 billion infrastructure fund, allowing for more aggressive fiscal policies to counter years of underinvestment and sluggish economic growth. The government also introduced specific allowances for defense spending exceeding 1% of GDP. Net borrowing had already risen to €81.8 billion in 2025, setting a precedent for the larger figures now projected for 2027.

What this means for markets and crypto investors

Germany loosening fiscal policy at this scale sends a signal across European capital markets. More government spending means more economic activity, more bond issuance, and potentially higher growth expectations for the eurozone.

Germany issuing €203 billion in new debt means a flood of Bunds hitting the market. If yields rise as a result, that could attract capital toward fixed income and away from risk assets, including crypto. If the European Central Bank accommodates the spending with supportive monetary policy, the effect could be neutral or even positive for digital assets.

The €54.9 billion infrastructure allocation could drive demand for tokenized real-world assets and blockchain-based supply chain solutions.

The parliamentary debate starting in September will be the next checkpoint. Any material changes to defense or infrastructure allocations during the review process could shift market expectations.

Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.

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