(Reuters) - Germany 's economy will expand at a
decent rate next year, underpinned by exports to countries outside the euro
zone, Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble said.
Speaking to
newspaper Bild, he added he had no plans for an austerity package after
parliamentary elections next September, denying a weekend media report.
"The
situation is better than we thought because among other things, business with the
United States and Asia is stronger. The German economy will therefore grow
decently in 2013," Schaeuble said in an advance extract from Friday's
edition of the top-selling daily.
The euro
zone debt crisis was, however, having some effect on Europe 's
biggest economy, he said.
Many
economists expect the government to cut its growth forecast for next year from
a current projection of 1 percent due partly to a likely sluggish turn of the
year, but few expect a recession - two consecutive quarters of contraction.
Schaeuble
said the government wanted to present a plan for a balanced budget before the
election, but he "comprehensively" denied a report in Der Spiegel
that any new government led by conservative Chancellor Angela Merkel would seek
to impose austerity measures thereafter.
The
magazine said the finance ministry had drafted plans for an extensive
post-election programme including cuts in social spending and a rise in sales
tax.
Many
pollsters expect Merkel to win the vote and to team up with the opposition
Social Democrats (SPD) in a grand coalition. An Infratest Dimap poll from last
week put Merkel's conservative bloc on 40 percent, some ten points ahead of the
SPD. The Greens, the SPD's preferred partner, were on 13 percent.
The finance
ministry, which also denied the Spiegel report, has said its officials are
working on getting a balanced budget in 2013.
In the Bild
interview, Schaeuble warned against steep wage rises next year. "I think
moderate wage increases are possible but in economically unsettled times ...you
should not go over the top," he said.
(Reporting
by Madeline Chambers; Editing by John Stonestreet)
Link to
article: http://uk.reuters.com/article/2012/12/27/uk-germany-economy-idUKBRE8BQ07G20121227
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