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NBA Kings waive six-time All-Star forward DeRozan
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Spain win it late to bid farewell to Ronaldo at World Cup
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Stock markets meander as US tech stocks climb
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FIFA chief forced to defend Balogun World Cup reprieve
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Trump touts latest White House renovation: a new helipad
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Canadian Artemis II crew member to retire from space agency
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IMF urges Germany to enact 'pro-growth' reforms
The International Monetary Fund said Wednesday that Germany's public spending ramp-up must be accompanied by "pro-growth" reforms to ensure Europe's beleaguered top economy makes a sustained recovery.
Chancellor Friedrich Merz's coalition is making huge extra outlays on infrastructure and defence, which it hopes will spur a turnaround after two years of recession.
After a visit to Germany by several of its officials, the IMF praised the country's "landmark" decision this year to ease strict debt rules, which paved the way to a sharp increase in public spending.
This had "set the stage for economic recovery," it said in a statement.
But the financial institution called for the extra money to be spent wisely to put the economy on a sustainable long-term footing.
It also said the efforts "should be complemented by pro-growth structural reforms, including measures to foster more innovation and digitalisation, cut red tape, reduce labour supply constraints... and deepen European economic integration".
According to the institution's most recent forecasts, Germany's economy will return to growth this year, with output of 0.2 percent, and pick up pace in 2026 with a 0.9-percent expansion.
There is growing unease about Merz's economic plans however -- critics say public spending is moving too slowly, is being misdirected, and there is little focus on deep reform.
Merz on Tuesday defended his government against criticism it is going too slowly, pointing to planned overhauls in the areas of corporate income tax and industry power prices.
"Germany is not a speedboat, Germany is a large ship," he told an event hosted by the BDA employers' association.
"A tanker of this size cannot be turned around in a matter of days, like a speedboat turning 180 degrees in the other direction. It takes time."
Germany's economy has suffered in recent years due to the energy price shock from the Ukraine war, an industrial slump and growing competition in traditional industries, particularly from China.
The tariff blitz launched by the United States -- Germany's top export market -- has added to headwinds.
R.Adler--BTB