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Dresden saves: supplementary budget to reduce deficit

Dresden saves: supplementary budget to reduce deficit
Dresden wants to reduce its deficit in the current year with a supplementary budget - voluntary services will be cut, road construction projects postponed. / Photo: Robert Michael/dpa
From: DieSachsen News
Dresden is planning savings of 38.3 million euros in voluntary services. Nevertheless, the budget deficit remains high - and further painful cuts could be imminent in the future.

Dresden wants to slightly reduce its growing budget deficit in the current year with a supplementary budget that provides for savings measures worth millions and postponed investments. The background to this are new forecasts from an interim financial report last year, according to which the budget result for 2026 is likely to be 144 million euros worse than previously planned. The reasons for this include further rising costs due to mandatory municipal tasks in social and youth welfare. At the same time, the city is expecting lower revenue due to the weak economy.

The draft, which will first be discussed by the finance committee on Tuesday and then by the city council at the end of April, envisages savings of 38.3 million euros. Only voluntary services are affected, it continues. This reduces the expected deficit in 2026 to around 123.9 million euros - a balanced budget is therefore still a long way off.

Mayor Dirk Hilbert (FDP) speaks of "deep red figures". "The structural imbalance in municipal financing, which has also been lamented by the German Association of Cities for months, cannot be countered with the funds available to us." For the future, the city is therefore expecting further necessary savings measures and a "review of the structures of municipal services".

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Where savings will be made in detail

The city says it is highlighting "existing savings potential resulting from changed framework conditions compared to the planning status of the 2026 budget". It mentions city-wide savings of around three million euros in energy costs and 4.5 million euros less in the city's own daycare operations due to falling birth rates. According to the information, around eight million euros in savings will result from the falling number of asylum seekers. This would result in "a lower need for accommodation capacity with its ancillary costs".

The supplementary budget is also not entirely without consequences for the city council: For example, the disposal budgets of the city district offices are to fall by 1.3 million euros. According to the city, this corresponds to a reduction of 27 percent. As a result, Dresden's district councils will be able to support fewer local projects, for example. In addition, there will be savings in project funding for equality work or the "implementation of measures of the UN Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities".

Some road maintenance measures will be postponed. The same applies to measures in the areas of urban greenery and waste management. Longer approval and inspection procedures and "unforeseeable changes in construction processes" would also mean that financial resources for construction projects would only be needed later than previously thought.

City is obliged to make savings

Last year, the State Directorate of Saxony only approved the city's 2025/2026 double budget subject to conditions and pointed out a significant funding gap. The city is obliged to adjust the budget to the worsened situation and demonstrate its own consolidation efforts.

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