By: Reuters with CNBC
German Finance Minister Wolfgang
Schaeuble questioned on Tuesday how the United States could deal with its high
levels of government debt after November's presidential election.
Axel Schmidt |
AFP | Getty Images
German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble
|
In a speech to the Bundestag lower
house of parliament to open a debate on the 2013 German budget, Schaeuble said
worries about U.S. debt were a burden for the global economy,
hitting back at Washington which has criticized Europe for failing to get a grip
on its own debt crisis.
In private, German officials often
express concern about U.S. debt levels and the inability of politicians there to
reach a consensus on how to reduce it, but Schaeuble's public remarks underscore
the extent of the worries in Germany.
"Ahead of the election in the United States
there is great uncertainty about the course American politics will
take in dealing the U.S. government's debts, which are much too high," Schaeuble
said. "We need to remind ourselves of that sometimes and the global economy
knows that and is burdened by it."
A weak economy and political
gridlock in Washington have prevented meaningful debt reduction in the United
States, which has run budget deficits topping $1 trillion for three straight
years.
The issue has become a central
theme of the U.S. election campaign with Republican candidate Mitt Romney
accusing President Barack Obama of fiscal mismanagement, and the White House
slamming Republicans in Congress for blocking government efforts to get the U.S.
fiscal house in order.
Last year, U.S. lawmakers reached
an 11th hour deal to increase the Treasury Department's borrowing authority,
which had bumped up against a legal limit, averting an unprecedented
default.
But Treasury Secretary Timothy
Geithner has said the United States is likely to hit a $16.4 trillion borrowing
limit by the end of the year.
The Paris-based Organization for
Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) has warned against a sharp fiscal
retrenchment in the United States, saying this could derail the fragile recover
there.
Unless politicians agree on a
plan, a wave of
U.S. spending cuts and tax hikes — dubbed the "fiscal
cliff" — are set to take effect in January, within months of the November 6
election.
German Chancellor Angela Merkel
has established a close relationship with Obama and they are of one mind on many
foreign policy issues.
But members of her conservative
party have welcomed the Romney campaign's focus on debt reduction.
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