Executive Summary

In December 2024, Germany rejected proposals for new multilateral defence banks, representing a critical juncture in European defence financing. This case study examines the implications of Germany’s decision to oppose both the Defence, Security and Resilience Bank (DSRB) and European Rearmament Bank (ERB), favoring instead the EU’s existing SAFE scheme.

Case Study: The Competing Proposals

Background Context

The geopolitical landscape has dramatically shifted European defence priorities. With the Pentagon requesting Europe assume majority responsibility for NATO’s conventional defence capabilities by 2027, pressure intensified to find innovative financing mechanisms for rapid rearmament.

The Key Players

Defence, Security and Resilience Bank (DSRB)

  • Proposed scale: £100 billion ($133 billion)
  • Lending model: Direct lending to defence firms
  • Geographic scope: Global (including Canada)
  • Banking support: Deutsche Bank, JPMorgan, Commerzbank, ING
  • Credit rating goal: Triple-A

European Rearmament Bank (ERB)

  • Proposed scale: €250 billion in lending capacity
  • Capital requirement: €10 billion from shareholders over three years
  • Geographic scope: European NATO members only
  • Current support: Poland (only confirmed endorser)
  • Credit rating goal: Triple-A

Germany’s Alternative: SAFE Scheme

  • Existing EU framework
  • Capacity: €150 billion in loans
  • Purpose: Joint defence procurement by member states
  • Status: Operational

Germany’s Rationale

Germany’s rejection rests on several pillars:

  1. Market Access Advantage: Germany can refinance at optimal market rates without needing multilateral intermediaries
  2. Institutional Efficiency: Preference for leveraging existing mechanisms rather than creating new bureaucracies
  3. Implementation Focus: Emphasis on rapid deployment of current tools over designing new institutions
  4. Risk Avoidance: Reluctance to commit state backing to untested multilateral structures

Critical Setbacks

The DSRB faces compounding challenges:

  • UK government distanced itself (September 2024)
  • Germany rejected the proposal (December 2024)
  • No active discussions in EU or NATO forums
  • Limited political momentum despite banking sector interest

Outlook: Future Scenarios

Short-Term (2025-2026)

Most Likely Scenario: The proposals face an extended period of dormancy. Without German and British support, achieving the critical mass needed for triple-A rated multilateral institutions becomes virtually impossible. The ERB’s attempt to merge with DSRB may gain traction as both initiatives recognize the futility of competing proposals.

Key Indicators to Watch:

  • France’s position on multilateral defence banks
  • Poland’s commitment level to ERB
  • SAFE scheme utilization rates
  • Private sector financing innovations

Medium-Term (2027-2030)

Potential Revival Conditions:

  • A major security crisis that overwhelms SAFE’s capacity
  • Demonstrated inadequacy of existing mechanisms
  • US withdrawal of security guarantees forcing European self-reliance
  • Leadership changes in Germany or UK that favor multilateral approaches

Alternative Path: Rather than monolithic institutions, we may see fragmented regional financing mechanisms emerge, with smaller coalitions of willing nations creating limited-scope defence banks.

Long-Term (2030+)

The defence financing architecture will likely evolve based on how Europe performs under the 2027 NATO capability transfer deadline. Success with existing tools validates Germany’s position; failure creates political space for radical alternatives including revived multilateral bank proposals.

Solutions: Addressing the Financing Gap

Immediate Solutions

1. Optimize SAFE Scheme Utilization

  • Streamline approval processes for joint procurement
  • Expand eligible project categories
  • Increase transparency around allocation criteria
  • Establish fast-track mechanisms for urgent capabilities

2. National Defence Bonds

  • Countries issue dedicated defence infrastructure bonds
  • Ring-fenced revenues for specific capability development
  • Appeal to retail investors through patriotic messaging
  • Tax advantages to improve attractiveness

3. Public-Private Partnerships

  • Direct government contracts with extended payment terms
  • Revenue-sharing models for dual-use technologies
  • Joint ventures between defence ministries and manufacturers
  • Risk-sharing mechanisms to encourage private investment

Structural Solutions

4. Enhanced EU Budget Integration

  • Increase defence allocation in multi-annual financial framework
  • Create permanent defence investment line items
  • Establish rolling procurement funds
  • Implement automatic stabilizers for crisis spending

5. Bilateral and Trilateral Cooperation

  • Smaller coalitions form joint procurement entities
  • Weimar Triangle (France-Germany-Poland) defence fund
  • Nordic Defence Financing Mechanism
  • Mediterranean Security Investment Group

6. Capital Market Innovations

  • Defence ETFs and investment vehicles
  • Sustainability-linked defence bonds (linking to supply chain resilience)
  • Catastrophe bonds for rapid capability acquisition
  • Securitization of long-term defence contracts

Extended Solutions: Transformative Approaches

Paradigm Shift 1: Distributed Financing Network

Rather than a single multilateral bank, create an interconnected network of specialized financing institutions:

European Defence Venture Capital Fund

  • Focus: Next-generation technologies (AI, autonomous systems, cyber)
  • Funding: €5 billion seed capital from EU members
  • Structure: Quasi-private with government backstop
  • Target: Small and medium enterprises, startups

Heavy Industry Recapitalization Facility

  • Focus: Traditional platforms (tanks, artillery, ships, aircraft)
  • Funding: €50 billion loan guarantee authority
  • Structure: State-backed credit enhancement
  • Target: Established defence primes

Critical Supply Chain Resilience Bank

  • Focus: Rare earth processing, semiconductor capacity, ammunition production
  • Funding: €20 billion direct lending capacity
  • Structure: Multilateral with regional chapters
  • Target: Strategic infrastructure projects

Paradigm Shift 2: Contingent Capital Mechanism

Establish a “Defence Readiness Reserve” that activates only when triggered:

Structure:

  • Member states pre-commit to capital calls based on defined triggers
  • Triggers include NATO Article 5 invocation, major territorial violation, or supermajority vote
  • Remains unfunded until activation, avoiding immediate fiscal burden
  • Automatic conversion of commitments to capital within 30 days of trigger

Advantages:

  • No immediate budget impact
  • Demonstrates collective commitment
  • Creates deterrent value through visible solidarity
  • Activates only when genuinely needed

Paradigm Shift 3: Defence Capability Futures Market

Create a regulated market for defence capability commitments:

Mechanism:

  • Nations pledge to develop specific capabilities by specific dates
  • These commitments become tradeable instruments
  • Countries with comparative advantages can specialize and trade
  • Market pricing reveals true costs and identifies gaps
  • Financial penalties for non-delivery fund compensatory procurement

Benefits:

  • Efficient allocation based on competitive advantage
  • Transparent price discovery for capability development
  • Built-in accountability mechanisms
  • Reduces duplication across European defence industrial base

Paradigm Shift 4: Sovereign Wealth Fund Model

Transform defence financing into an investment proposition:

European Defence Endowment:

  • Initial capitalization: €30 billion from member contributions
  • Investment strategy: Equity stakes in defence companies, infrastructure, technology
  • Revenue generation: Dividends, licensing fees, IP royalties
  • Perpetual fund that finances defence while building wealth

Unique Features:

  • Shifts from pure expenditure to investment mindset
  • Creates incentive alignment between fiscal responsibility and capability
  • Generates returns that can fund future procurement
  • Attracts institutional investors seeking stable, strategic returns

Singapore Impact Analysis

Direct Impacts

1. Regional Security Dynamics

Singapore’s security environment is not directly affected by European defence financing mechanisms. However, the failure of multilateral defence banks signals broader trends:

  • Weakening of Multilateral Frameworks: If Europe cannot agree on collective financing despite existential threats, it reinforces Singapore’s reliance on bilateral relationships and self-reliance
  • US Force Posture Implications: If European NATO members struggle to assume conventional defence responsibilities by 2027, US may maintain or increase Indo-Pacific focus, potentially benefiting Singapore’s security environment

2. Defence Industrial Cooperation

Singapore maintains defence relationships with European suppliers:

  • Procurement Uncertainty: European defence industry financing challenges could affect delivery timelines for Singapore’s European-sourced systems
  • Technology Transfer: Financial constraints may make European firms more willing to offer technology partnerships to access Asian markets and capital
  • Alternative Suppliers: Validates Singapore’s multi-source procurement strategy rather than over-reliance on any single region

Indirect Strategic Implications

3. Multilateralism vs. Bilateralism

Germany’s rejection offers lessons for ASEAN and regional cooperation:

  • Coalition Building Challenges: Even pressing security needs don’t guarantee multilateral consensus
  • Institutional Design: Large, ambitious institutions face higher barriers than incremental, focused mechanisms
  • National Interest Primacy: Countries with strong independent capabilities (like Germany in Europe, Singapore in Southeast Asia) may prefer autonomy over pooled arrangements

4. Financial Architecture Lessons

For Singapore as a financial hub:

Opportunity Identification:

  • Positioning Singapore as alternative financing hub for defence innovation
  • Developing Asian defence financing instruments
  • Creating regulatory frameworks for defence technology investment

Risk Management:

  • European struggles highlight difficulties in creating triple-A rated multilateral institutions
  • Caution when evaluating similar proposals in Asian context
  • Importance of starting small and proving concept before scaling

Strategic Opportunities for Singapore

1. Defence Financing Hub

With European multilateral approaches stalling, Singapore could:

  • Develop specialized defence financing vehicles for Southeast Asian market
  • Offer expertise in structured finance for defence projects
  • Create regulatory sandbox for defence technology investment
  • Position as neutral intermediary for regional defence cooperation

2. Technology Bridge

European defence firms seeking capital and Asian markets present opportunities:

  • Joint ventures bringing European technology to Asia-Pacific
  • Singapore as testing ground for European defence innovations
  • Tri-lateral partnerships (Singapore-Europe-ASEAN) for capability development
  • Investment in distressed European defence tech companies

3. Policy Leadership

Singapore can demonstrate alternative approaches:

  • Showcase effective bilateral cooperation models (Five Power Defence Arrangements)
  • Develop doctrine around “networked bilateralism” as alternative to multilateralism
  • Publish thought leadership on practical defence cooperation frameworks
  • Host forums on alternative financing mechanisms

Singapore’s Positioning Strategy

Near-Term Actions:

  • Monitor European defence firms for investment opportunities
  • Strengthen bilateral defence industrial partnerships
  • Enhance domestic defence financing capabilities
  • Maintain procurement diversification

Long-Term Strategic Positioning:

  • Develop Singapore as Asia-Pacific defence innovation and financing node
  • Build expertise in practical, implementable cooperation frameworks
  • Create case studies demonstrating Singapore model’s effectiveness
  • Influence regional security architecture through demonstrated success

Conclusion

Germany’s rejection of multilateral defence banks reveals fundamental tensions between ambitious institutional design and practical political realities. While the immediate outlook for DSRB and ERB appears bleak, the underlying financing challenge persists. Europe must close an estimated €500+ billion defence capability gap, and existing mechanisms may prove insufficient.

The failure of grand multilateral proposals may paradoxically accelerate more creative, distributed solutions. For Singapore, this European struggle offers valuable lessons about the limits of multilateralism and opportunities to position itself as a pragmatic alternative model for defence cooperation and financing in the Asia-Pacific region.

The next 24 months will be critical. If SAFE scheme proves adequate and Germany’s bet on existing mechanisms pays off, multilateral defence banks will fade into history as cautionary tales. If capability gaps persist and crises emerge, these proposals may resurrect in modified forms. Singapore’s optimal strategy is to watch, learn, and prepare to capitalize on both scenarios.