Finland’s parliamentary parties have reached a cross-party deal on a national “debt brake”, designed to curb public borrowing and stabilize the economy in the coming years. The Left Alliance was the only party to reject the pact, calling it unnecessary and restrictive.
The agreement introduces a framework under which all major parties will set medium-term fiscal goals before each election, defining acceptable deficit levels for the state, municipalities, and wellbeing regions. The plan includes a deficit ceiling of 2.5% of GDP and an initial debt-to-GDP target of 60%, aligning with EU fiscal rules, with a long-term goal of 40%.
Supporters, including members of the National Coalition Party and Social Democrats, hailed the deal as a major step toward fiscal responsibility and transparency. They emphasized that while the framework sets shared financial limits, parties retain autonomy in how to meet them.
Opponents, led by Left Alliance chief Minja Koskela, argued that the mechanism could limit flexibility during downturns and unnecessarily duplicate EU regulations. Despite dissent, the agreement establishes a permanent parliamentary group to monitor compliance and adjust targets as needed, marking a new phase in Finland’s long-term fiscal policy.
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