Consensus Democracy and Interjurisdictional Fiscal Solidarity
in Germany
Paul Bernd Spahn and Oliver Franz
The paper discusses recent
developments of German fiscal federalism—especially the Länderfinanzausgleich, i.e. Germany’s unique system of horizontal equalization. A
ruling by the Constitutional Court has cracked the status quo, and the parties
involved (federation and states) have begun a process of bargaining on a new
equalization system. This process is assessed against the background of recent
historic developments in particular with regard to interjurisdictional solidarity
in Germany, which has come under scrutiny after ten years of significant financial
transfers to the formerly communist states in the East. The paper argues that
there is a conflict between solidarity and subsidiarity in today’s Germany, whereby the former has won over the latter.
Subsidiarity must now be emphasized more strongly than before. Taking Germany’s federal structure as given,
contractual forms of governance are shown to be a possible solution for some
of the problems that are so far treated within horizontal equalization.
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