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German labour agency faces over 8 billion euro deficit in 2026, report says

By Thomson Reuters Jun 2, 2026 | 9:24 AM

BERLIN, June 2 (Reuters) – Germany’s Federal Employment Agency (BA) faces a deficit of more than €8 billion euros ($9.3 billion) this ​year, more than twice the shortfall ‌previously planned, according to a BA report for the federal parliament’s budget committee seen by Reuters on Tuesday.

The agency had assumed a ‌deficit ​of just under 4 ⁠billion euros in its ⁠2026 budget planning but a weaker labour market and downgraded economic outlook mean the gap is now expected to ​widen sharply, the report said.

If the contribution rate for unemployment insurance remains ⁠unchanged, the labour agency ⁠would have to cover the ​shortfall through a government’s loan.

The budget committee is ​due to discuss the agency’s financial ‌outlook next week.

OUTLOOK UNTIL 2030 CLOUDS OVER

The labour agency also expects deficits in the coming years, with accumulated debt potentially ⁠rising to around 23 billion euros by 2030.

The agency projects a deficit of 2.7 billion ⁠euros in ‌2030, based on the government’s ⁠spring forecast, which assumes a ​significantly ‌weaker economy and labour market ​than previously ⁠expected.

While the government’s autumn projection had forecast unemployment falling to 2.742 million by 2030, the current estimate is 2.828 million.

($1 = 0.8591 euros)

(Reporting by Holger Hansen, writing by ​Maria Martinez)