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German infrastructure fund misses its spending targets, Handelsblatt says

German infrastructure fund misses its spending targets, Handelsblatt says

ReutersSun, May 31, 2026 at 8:49 PM UTC

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A view shows the skyline of Frankfurt, Germany, July 5, 2022. REUTERS/Kai Pfaffenbach

May 31 (Reuters) - Germany's special fund for infrastructure has so far failed to reach its targets on how much to ‌disburse, a 383-page finance ministry report due to be published ‌this week shows, newspaper Handelsblatt said on Sunday.

• The €500 billion ($583 billion) fund was created ​last year as a way to revive the German economy but it has taken time to take effect. Economists and business groups have warned the fund alone cannot deliver sustainable growth.

• The report is due to ‌be sent to the ⁠lower house of parliament's budget committee and then made public early this week.

• A finance ministry spokesperson declined ⁠to comment.

• Last year, the fund was supposed to disburse €37.4 billion but instead spent only 24 billion euros, Handelsblatt reported. Of 109 planned "milestones" for 2026, ​it ​had achieved only 26 by the ​end of May, it added.

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• ‌The ministry has introduced a "progress and effectiveness indicator" to assess the extent to which investment projects are meeting their targets, the newspaper said, adding that the average across the fund is 54%.

• The highest figure by sector was 90% each for investments in hospitals and sports ‌facilities, followed by 66% for housing construction, ​57% for digitization, 52% for transportation and ​45% for energy infrastructure, it ​said. In education and childcare infrastructure, there was ‌no measurable progress.

• A separate finance ​ministry document seen ​by Reuters said the fund's investments were boosting German gross domestic product by half a percentage point, a figure that Handelsblatt also ​cited from the ‌report. The document also said the pace of implementation needs ​to be increased.

($1 = 0.8577 euro)

(Reporting by Joern Poltz in MunichWriting ​by Francois MurphyEditing by Matthew Lewis)

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