subsidy

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A subsidy (from the Latin subvenire , 'to come to the aid' , support) is a service from public funds to companies or companies . Subsidies are economic policy interventions in the market, with which a certain behavior of the market participants should be promoted.

The definition of the term subsidy is controversial between lawyers and economists. There is agreement that welfare state transfer payments such as unemployment benefit II , BAföG or pension grants are not subsidies in the legal sense.

An internationally valid definition of the concept of subsidy does not yet exist. This would be desirable in order to clearly differentiate the term from dumping , which is defined as “price discrimination between national markets” or “the placing of goods in one country on the market in another country below their normal value”.

Definitions

Legal definitions

A legal definition is available in § 264 para. 7 of the Criminal Code for subsidy fraud :

Subsidy within the meaning of this provision is

1. a service from public funds under federal or state law to companies or companies that at least partially

a) is granted without market consideration and
b) is intended to promote the economy;

2. A service from public funds according to the law of the European Communities, which is granted at least in part without market consideration. Operation or company within the meaning of sentence 1 No. 1 is also the public company.

In European law , the term “state aid ” is used for subsidy . This aid is included in the definition of subsidies in the Criminal Code via Section 264 (7) No. 2 StGB.

The concept of aid in Art. 107 TFEU (ex Art. 87 EGV) is characterized by five elements:

  1. Grant from state resources: In this context it is sufficient if the measure in question can be attributed to the state. The state not only includes all levels of government (federal, state, local), but also institutions established by the state.
  2. Favoring: The beneficial effect is to be affirmed if the company concerned does not provide a corresponding - customary - consideration for the measure (injection of funds or reduction of the burden).
  3. Selectivity: certain undertakings or branches of production are favored if a measure is selective and thereby affects the balance between the beneficiary and its competitors in favor of the former. A measure is not selective if it is justified by the nature or general purposes of the system to which it belongs (measure linked to objective criteria and benefiting a very large number of companies).
  4. Distortion of competition: There is a distortion of competition if the measure actually or potentially intervenes in a competitive relationship and thus changes the course of the competition.
  5. Trade impairment: In the case of trade impairment, a possible impact on international trade is sufficient.

State aid is present if all of the above criteria are met cumulatively. In Art. 107  et seq. TFEU ( prohibition of aid ) Details of the permissibility are related. Regulated.

The § 12 StabG stipulates that federal funds for specific purposes in places outside the federal administration are given, especially financial aid should be granted so that the objectives of § 1 does not contradict StabG. The § 14 HGrG defines grants as "expenditure and commitment authorizations for services outside the administration of the federal or state for the fulfillment of certain purposes" and ties their guarantee to certain conditions: Such may only "be estimated if the federal or state has a considerable interest in the fulfillment by such bodies, which cannot be satisfied or not to the necessary extent without the donations. "

Economic definition

In economics , the term is further defined. There the term also includes tax breaks and fee reductions or exemptions and social benefits .

Political debate

In the political discussion, different terms of subsidy are often used as an instrument of argumentation, which only corresponds to the requirement of political honesty if the respective argumentation basis is disclosed and justified; however, this is mostly not the case.

After all, it can be stated after the above that subsidies are predominantly used by the state as an instrument of economic policy . According to US law, however, private benefits, for example from companies, banks and associations, also count as “subsidies”. This view was probably retained in order to have a handle against the (undesirable) activity of private compensation funds.

In any case, a consideration of their different manifestations and their defining criteria contributes to a better understanding of the nature of the subsidies.

Objective and criteria

Subsidies are economic actions to achieve a political and social goal; they always presuppose a donation, benefit or discount.

Promotion subsidies
open up new economic fields z. B. by setting up new companies in economically important future technologies (e.g. biotechnology )
Adjustment subsidies
make it possible to adapt to new economic and social forms to which companies may be exposed (e.g. increased use of renewable energies )
Maintenance subsidies
for structures worth protecting for cultural or social reasons (e.g. agriculture and mining )

Types of subsidies (economic considerations and terminology)

There are two basic types of subsidies: production subsidies and export subsidies . The production subsidy is a grant to industry to promote the manufacture of a product, regardless of whether the product in question is exported or distributed in the country of manufacture. An export subsidy exists, however, if the grant is tied to the condition that the products in question are exclusively those for export.

Award procedure

Subsidies can be awarded through various procedures:

Lost grants:
The direct payment of funds is the classic form of subsidy. Here, due to a political purpose, a company is provided with financial support, which flows directly into its liquid funds . In contrast to loans, these do not have to be repaid.
Excessive prices:
Here the state guarantees that the producers receive prices above market prices. Examples are the intervention price in agricultural policy or the feed- in tariffs in the field of energy policy.
Loan:
In order to finance entrepreneurial activities independently of private-sector credit regulations, the company can be granted or enabled a publicly subsidized, cheaper loan. Loans on more favorable terms than paying on the market enable the public sector to make an entrepreneurial investment that still works in the market and can also be amortized. The primary task of the Reconstruction Loan Corporation is to provide industrial SMEs, start-ups and private individuals with cheap loans. All loans are granted exclusively for projects in infrastructure, housing construction and energy-saving technologies, but also educational loans, film financing and funds for development cooperation.
Guarantees:
If it is possible for an entrepreneur to obtain a loan under private law, but for which the loan collateral is insufficient, the public sector can provide this collateral with public guarantees. The main application for guarantees is export credit insurance (e.g. Hermes cover ) to promote exports.
Real funding:
The award of public contracts can be linked to public goals. In the case of real funding, the public sector foregoes the most favorable market price and accepts additional costs in favor of a political goal. The sale of real assets from the public sector to an entrepreneur at a price that is not customary in the market is also real subsidies (e.g. sale of land to non-profit housing cooperatives ).
Tax subsidy:
The tax subsidy (also exemption subsidy, indirect subsidy) is a subsidy in the broader sense. A general tax exemption or a specific tax reduction through a tax exemption also fulfill the essential characteristics of a subsidy: asset performance, lack of market performance, authority and private person.
Other subsidies:
Other cases are production reimbursement and export subsidies in the area of agricultural market regulations .
Assumption of external costs:
External costs caused by the recipient of the subsidy are borne by the general public. This aspect plays a role especially in environmental policy .

In addition to the subsidies, there are a number of other state interventions in economic life, such as state film funding .

Subsidies for farms that are not product-linked are also known as direct payments .

Assessment / criticism

income
Subsidies support income or production.
Intervention in the market
Subsidies can lower or increase market prices (example: promotion of housing construction with fixed rental prices by means of cheap public loans to lower the rental price level) or increase (example: set-aside premiums to reduce agricultural production and increase or stabilize market prices for agricultural products).
Political purpose
A politically desired purpose can be promoted through subsidies.
competition
Subsidized companies have competitive advantages over the others.
Location loyalty
Nationally subsidized companies are given an incentive not to relocate abroad.
Malfunction (incorrect resource allocation )
Sometimes subsidies continue to be paid when the original political purpose no longer exists.
globalization
Companies that move to other locations often do not repay the subsidies they receive.
height
Determining the optimal level of subsidies is often a problem.
Lobbying
Lobbies get unjustified payments.

Legal issues

An intervention in the market, which is brought about by subsidies, becomes a legal problem when free trade is legally secured, as is the case within the European Union and between the signatory states of the World Trade Union (WTO). For this reason, Art. 107 TFEU ​​contains a general prohibition of aid, which, however, is broken by a number of exceptions ( European state aid law ). If a Member State grants subsidies that contravene this prohibition, the European Commission can declare the granting of subsidies to be contrary to Union law and take a decision according to which the Member State must reclaim the subsidies. If a member state intends to grant subsidies, it is obliged under Art. 108 (3) sentence 1 TFEU to report this to the European Commission ( notification obligation ). Within the World Trade Organization, the Agreement on Subsidies and Countervailing Measures severely restricts the permissibility of subsidies, including tax subsidies. Both within the European Community and between the contracting states of the World Trade Organization, there are often conflicts over export subsidies granted by individual states in order to give their domestic economies a competitive advantage. Export subsidies contained in tax laws are a special case.

Subsidy reporting

In a number of countries there is regular subsidy reporting by the government or the relevant ministry.

Germany

According to the Stability and Growth Act, the federal government is obliged to report to the Bundestag on federal subsidies every two years.

Electoral term from ... to BT printed matter Subsidy report
18th 2013-2016 BT-Drs. 18/5940 25th subsidy report of the federal government (PDF; 2.9 MB)
17th 2011-2014 BT-Drs. 17/14621 24th Federal Government Subsidy Report
17th 2009–2012 23. Federal Government Subsidy Report
16-17 2007-2010 22nd subsidy report of the federal government
16 2005-2008 BT-Drs. 16/6275 21st subsidy report of the federal government (PDF; 2.5 MB)
16 2003-2006 BT-Drs. 16/1020 20th subsidy report of the federal government (PDF; 2.6 MB)
15th 2001-2004 BT-Drs. 15/1635 19th subsidy report of the federal government (PDF; 2.6 MB)
14th 1999-2002 BT-Drs. 14/6748 18th subsidy report of the federal government (PDF; 1.4 MB)

Note: The definition of the term “subsidy” is also discussed in the 20th subsidy report.

There is also subsidy reporting by individual federal states:

Switzerland

Various criteria can be used to search the database. In 1997, 1999 and 2008 the Federal Council published a subsidy report.

Austria

The Austrian federal government reports on the subsidies in the funding report

Non-governmental compilations

There are also compilations of subsidies from scientific and other non-governmental institutions such as the Kiel subsidy report of the Institute for World Economy at the University of Kiel .

See also

Web links

Wiktionary: Subsidy  - explanations of meanings, word origins, synonyms, translations

Individual evidence

  1. Johannes-Friedrich Beseler: The defense against dumping and subsidies by the European Communities (= series of publications on the European economy. Vol. 109). Nomos-Verlags-Gesellschaft, Baden-Baden 1980, ISBN 3-7890-0592-4 , p. 41.
  2. Art. VI Para. 1 GATT .
  3. Christian Müller-Gugenberg, Klaus Bieneck (ed.): White collar crime. Manual of white-collar crime and administrative offenses law. 4th, revised and expanded edition. Publishing house Dr. Otto Schmidt, Cologne 2006, ISBN 3-504-40045-5 .
  4. ↑ State aid law 2009 .
  5. ^ Vijay Laxman Kelkar: GATT, Export Subsidies and Developing Countries. In: Journal of World Trade. Vol. 14, No. 4, 1980, ISSN  1011-6702 , pp. 368-373.
  6. Section 303 of the US Tariff Act of 1930.
  7. ^ Trade Act of 1974, Section 331, and Trade Agreements Act of 1979, Section 101.
  8. ^ John H. Jackson : Legal Problems of International Economic Relations. Cases, Materials and Texts on the national and international Regulation of transnational economic Relations. West Publishing, St. Paul MN 1977, p. 754.
  9. ^ Peter Friedrich Bultmann: State aid law and procurement law. Aid and public procurement as functionally equivalent instruments of economic control. A comparison of performance (= Jus publicum. Vol. 109). Mohr Siebeck, Tübingen 2004, ISBN 3-16-148437-1 (Also: Berlin, Humboldt University, habilitation paper, 2004).
  10. ^ The Uruguay Round Multilateral Negotiations (1986–1994) - Appendix 1 - Appendix 1A - Agreement on Subsidies and Countervailing Measures. In: Official Journal of the European Communities . Series L, No. 336, 1994, p. 156.
  11. Swiss subsidy database and report