Germany news: Cabinet discusses 2027 budget plans as Iran war threatens finances

What you need to know
- Plans to borrow almost €200 billion in 2027 come before the full costs of the Iran war can be calculated
- Various new stealth taxes, on things like cryptocurrency holdings and sugary drinks, are being planned to plug some fiscal gaps
- A Kazakh man has been arrested in Berlin on suspicion of spying for Russia
- Contentious reforms to statutory healthcare insurance are also up for discussion
- Roughly 1 in 5 new jobs in Germany offer work-from-home options, study finds
- A special barge is helping to guide the long-stranded humpback whale 'Timmy' back out to sea
Here is a roundup of the top headlines and human interest stories from Germany on Wednesday, April 29, 2026.
Skip next section Prosecutors announce arrest of Kazakh man suspected of spying for Russia04/29/2026April 29, 2026Prosecutors announce arrest of Kazakh man suspected of spying for Russia
Germany's Federal Prosecutor's Office has announced the arrest of a Kazakh national in Berlin on supicison of espionage activities on behalf of Russia.
The man, identified as Sergei K. was arrested on April 28 in the capital, prosecutors said in a press release on Wednesday.
"The accused is seriously suspected of having been active for a foreign intelligence service," prosecutors said, with a particular focus on assistance for Ukraine amid Russia's invasion.
Officers conducting Tuesday's arrest also searched the premises of the accused and of one other person not suspected of any crime.
"Sergei K. was in regular contact from Germany, starting in May 2025 at the latest, with a Russian intelligence service," prosecutors wrote. "Up until his arrest, the accused transmitted numerous items of information of various types to his senior officer."
Prosecutors said this included "details about the military support of the federal government of Germany for Ukraine, as well as the armaments and defense industry — in particular on companies that develop drones and robots."
They also allege that the man regularly sent photos of public buildings in Berlin or of military convoys traveling on highways, "among them a NATO member state's convoy."
According to investigators, the man also told his contact about suitable sabotage targets in Gemany and offered to recruit more people for sabotage or espionage activities.
https://p.dw.com/p/5Cz63Skip next section Germany to buy stake in African ATIDI risk-mitigation insurer04/29/2026April 29, 2026Germany to buy stake in African ATIDI risk-mitigation insurer
Germany will buy a 3.5% share in the African Trade & Investment Development Insurance (ATIDI) organization, Development Minister Alabali Radovan has said during her visit to Kenya.
The deal will make Germany the largest non-African stakeholder in the insurer, which is owned by a combination of 24 African countries and 13 international financial institutions.
ATIDI is an investment, trade and political risk-mitigation institution that's designed to provide insurance against risks when investing in Africa and so encourage private sector cash to flow to the continent.
"We are committing to facilitating investment and trade so that more private capital flows into Africa," Radovan said in Nairobi. "We are contributing towards German investors tapping into this enormous future market that the African continent has to offer."
ATIDI insures against risks such as political and economic crises, anything from a sudden military coup to a spiral of inflation. The idea is to encourage more risk-averse investors in the private sector to dip their toes into the African market with less fear of losing out as a result.
Germany will be spending in the region of €15 million (roughly $17.5 million) to acquire its stake, with the funds stemming partly from the Development Ministry and partly from the state-owned KfW development bank.
https://p.dw.com/p/5Cz0DSkip next section Roughly 1 in 5 German jobs offered work-from-home options in 2025: study04/29/2026April 29, 2026Roughly 1 in 5 German jobs offered work-from-home options in 2025: study
The number of job offers in Germany allowing work-from-home options remains high, despite the precarious economic backdrop, a study published on Wednesday shows.
According to the Bertelsmann Foundation, around 20% of jobs offered home office possibilities, "and so at the same high level as the previous year."
The foundation analyzed the development of work-from-home options from 2019, before the COVID pandemic that turbocharged the notion, through 2025, looking at some 79 million online job advertisements in Germany.
In 2019, it found that just 3.7% of online job offers allowed employees to work from home. By 2022, this ratio had risen "strongly" to 16.8%, the foundation said. As of 2024, the rate had reached 20% and stayed more or less stable in 2025, according to the study.
"Anyone who thought that everyone would have to return to the office in economically difficult times was mistaken," the foundation's labor market expert Gunvald Herdin said. "Home office is here to stay."
A large number of jobs across all sectors — agriculture, manufacturing, retail, healthcare, and so on — do not provide a realistic opportunity to work from home but for so-called white-collar workers in particular, it can be an option.
The foundation named the IT sector as having an especially strong work-from-home culture, with seven of the 10 most prolific home office jobs in IT. But it said that many career areas more commonly filled by women, "which are more marked by direct contact with people," home office options were more limited.
What it's like to move to Germany for work
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https://p.dw.com/p/5Cyk5Skip next section Core points of 2027 budget up for Cabinet approval as fiscal black hole expands04/29/2026April 29, 2026Core points of 2027 budget up for Cabinet approval as fiscal black hole expands
The federal government's Cabinet aims to sign off on the key points of its 2027 budget on Wednesday, which already foresees the second-largest year of borrowing on record, even before the longer-term economic impact of the war on Iran becomes clear.
The plans foresee new debts of almost €200 billion (roughly $235 billion) in 2027, more than half of that in the core budget.
The remainder will come out of the so-called "special funds" (Sondervermögen) for defense spending and infrastructure and climate projects that are exempt from the rules governing how much a German government can borrow each year.
The government is trying to find cuts worth around €20 billion by July in order to cover some of the costs, a process that in itself is liable to prove contentious.
Finance Minister Lars Klingbeil's as yet undefined aims to reform income tax to provide relief to low and middle-earners is only liable to put further strain on the calculations.
Various welfare cuts or reforms and stealth taxes — on things like alcohol, tobacco, cryptocurrency holdings and sugar — are being discussed to help balance the books.
One of the fastest-growing parts of the outlay is defense spending, amid the pressure on European NATO members to hike their budgets.
The defense spend in 2027 is projected to equate to 3.1% of GDP; that figure consistently stood between 1.1% and 1.2% of GDP between 2011 and 2019.
Meanwhile, this week a temporary reduction on fuel taxes, brought about by the war in Iran, will come into force — another sign of the conflict's potential to impact both public spending and the broader economy in ways the government cannot yet adequately plan for or anticipate.
The Cabinet is also looking to sign off on its less detailed and longer-term financial planning by starting to outline its plans through 2030, the projected end of the current legislative period.
German economy under pressure
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https://p.dw.com/p/5CylCSkip next section Welcome to our coverage04/29/2026April 29, 2026Welcome to our coverage
Mark Hallam | Alex Berry EditorMoin from Bonn, thanks for joining us.
Sunny and warmer spring temperatures are forecast across most of Germany this Wednesday, a day after major raids against the Hells Angels motorcycle gang, that nine-goal Champions League thriller at the Allianz Arena between Bayern Munich and Paris St Germain, and more news of rock-bottom birth rates in Germany.
In Berlin, eyes are turning to the Cabinet and Finance Minister Lars Klingbeil, as the government starts the process of putting the core points of its 2027 budget and its medium term financing plans through the Bundestag.
It was already going to make grim reading for the bean counters, given plans to continue boosting defense spending, to cut income taxes, and to deal with the ever-anaemic growth that's defined most developed economies ever since 2008.
But the outbreak of war in Iran and the wider Middle East, the need for short-term responses like the cut on fuel taxes that will come into effect on May 1, and drastically revised domestic and international growth forecasts are complicating matters further still.
The Cabinet is also hoping to approve the government's reform plans for statutory public health insurance, an early step on that policy's road towards becoming law.
Outside the political arena, the stranded humpback whale "Timmy" is bound for open waters with the help of a special barge that's guiding the stricken marine mammal on the right course away from the Baltic Sea towards its natural habitat in the Atlantic Ocean.
Stick with us for updates on all these stories, and whatever else is making the news in Germany, during the course of the day.
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