German advisory panel urges future-focused spending from infrastructure fund

German Finance Minister Lars Klingbeil poses for photographers ahead of a press briefing with Germany’s Foreign Press Association (VAP) in Berlin, Germany, May 26, 2026. REUTERS/
BERLIN, June 9 (Reuters) – An independent advisory panel urged the German government on Tuesday to channel more ​money from its €500 billion ($578.30 billion) infrastructure fund ‌into future-focused areas, including research and development, digitalisation and energy infrastructure.
In its first report, the Investment and Innovation ​Advisory Board said such areas should ​be given priority alongside transport infrastructure.
It said funding ⁠could also support civil protection, hospitals, nursing ​homes and educational facilities.
“Investments are gaining momentum,” Finance ​Minister Lars Klingbeil said on Tuesday, adding that planning, approval and implementation by federal, state and municipal authorities needed ​to accelerate.
Last year, the fund was supposed to ​disburse €37.2 billion but instead spent only €24 billion, according to the ‌first ⁠monitoring report on the special fund by the finance ministry.
Critics say the government is using some of the financial firepower created to prop up ​day-to-day spending​rather than ⁠directing it all towards additional infrastructure to make the country fitter for ​the future.
The advisory panel also called ​for ⁠stronger efforts to mobilise private capital and greater transparency on funds passed to Germany’s states.
It recommended ⁠a public ​project database and quarterly ​reporting comparing planned and actual spending.
($1 = 0.8646 euros)

Reporting by Christian Kraemer, ​writing by Maria Martinez, editing by Friederike Heine

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