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Germany on brink of ‘cultural collapse’ with savage £108m budget cuts | World | News

Germanycould be set for cultural collapse after the nation’s capital, Berlin, made huge ranging cuts to the city’s arts budget.

This week Berlin city government approved cuts of up to £108 million from its cultural budget for 2025 despite weeks of protest against the proposed measures.

The plans have received vocal opposition from artists, museum leaders, and cultural organisations who fear that the sector could be set for venue closures and a hit to the city’s cultural standing.

The cuts represent a 12% cut on the previous year and has sparked fears that the city could lose its status as one of Europe’s foremost cultural capitals.

Emma Enderby, the director of the non-profit KW Institute for Contemporary Art, told The Art Newspaper: “Culture and clubs bring people to Berlin. They don’t come here for the food, they come here for the history and the culture.

“It’s very short notice, it also seems very short sighted.

“In Berlin, culture costs around 2% of the overall economy, yet they’re cutting us between around 10% and in some cases 50%.

Enderby says that her museum is already feeling the impact of the cuts with the museum has decided not to renew staff contracts and to scale back upcoming programs, including public engagement initiatives.

Philip Bröking, co-director of Berlin’s Komische Oper opera house is also preparing for a painful 2025.

He told Euronews Culture: “If that budget is cut, we face a double blow: fewer subsidies and less funding to cover extra costs. This makes us very sceptical about the future of our institution.”

The German economy has struggled to recover to pre-covid levels. Since the pandemic, the American economy has grown 12 percent in real terms, the German economy has not grown at all.

This has led to and is exasperated by political turmoil which has seen Chancellor Olaf Scholz subject of a no confidence vote and elections scheduled for February following the collapse of the coalition government, which the incumbent looks set to lose.

Whilst the economy is not in freefall, it is stagnant, with Chancellor Scholz recently calling for “more growth” stating that “it is high time to invest powerfully and decisively in Germany.”

The Berlin budget cuts indicate a significant change in focus, with previous years seeing spending maintained as the cultural importance of the city was prioritised.

In 2021, Germany approved a record £1.7 billion for federal culture funding, a £128 million increase from the year before.


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