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Germany welcomes Lufthansa's early bailout repayment

Lufthansa Group was saved from bankruptcy during the pandemic by Germany, Switzerland, Austria and Belgium with a financial framework of €9 billion
Lufthansa Group was saved from bankruptcy during the pandemic by Germany, Switzerland, Austria and Belgium with a financial framework of €9 billion

Germany's finance and economy ministries have today welcomed the early repayment by flag carrier Lufthansa of bailout aid that it received during the Covid crisis.

"It shows that it was important and right for the state to help the company through difficult times and thereby secure thousands of jobs," said Finance Minister Olaf Scholz.

He is on course to become Germany's next chancellor.

Lufthansa Group was saved from bankruptcy during the coronavirus pandemic by Germany, Switzerland, Austria and Belgium €9 billion in financial support approved by the European Commission in June 2020.

On Friday the German airline said that it had repaid an €1 billion it had received from the Economic Stabilisation Fund (ESF), meaning it had repaid or cancelled all the remaining supports.

The German airline only had to use about €3.8 billion of the support.

It was able to repay a loan from the KfW state bank of about €1 billion last February and in October it paid off a first round of silent ESF participation of about €1.5 billion.

Rising demand for travel, downsizing and the return of the market's confidence in the airline helped make it possible to pay the loans back faster than expected, Lufthansa said.

"On behalf of all Lufthansa employees, I would like to thank the German government and the German taxpayers," said Lufthansa CEO Carsten Spohr.

The ministries said that the stabilisation fund's remaining stake of about 14% would be sold by October 2023 at the latest.