Analysis: Europe, waiting for Germany, could be disappointed
A long exposure photograph shows an election campaign poster of German Chancellor and conservative Christian Democratic Union (CDU) leader Angela Merkel in Berlin, September 12, 2013. EREUTERS/Thomas Peter · Reuters

By Paul Taylor

PARIS (Reuters) - European policymakers have higher hopes than expectations of change in German policies after a general election next Sunday that has kept much European business on hold for months.

From Athens to Lisbon and Paris to Rome, governments want Berlin to move forward fast with a European Union banking union and adopt a more expansion economic policy that would help drive growth and fight unemployment in a stagnant euro zone.

EU partners expect conservative Chancellor Angela Merkel to win a third term, and many hope she will have to form a grand coalition with the center-left Social Democrats (SPD), seen as more pro-European and pro-stimulus than her current center-right Free Democratic allies in government.

The potential for disappointment is large.

"Whoever is elected, the constraints that Merkel has faced will remain the same for any German government," said Sylvie Goulard, a French liberal member of the European Parliament.

The triple lock of parliamentary sovereignty, hostile public opinion and a vigilant constitutional court will continue to limit Germany's willingness to share more European liabilities.

Merkel and her SPD challenger Peer Steinbrueck barely mentioned European and foreign policy in their only television debate, except to agree that Germany should have no part in any military response to the use of chemical weapons in Syria.

Steinbrueck accused Merkel of bungling the euro zone crisis by going slow and inflicting a poisonous dose of austerity on Greece and other bailed out countries. He kept silent about SPD support for pooling some euro zone debts, sensing a vote-loser.

The chancellor noted the SPD had voted for all her euro zone bailout but she offered no personal vision of Europe's future.

With the survival of the single currency no longer under threat and financial markets calm for now, experts expect Merkel to stick to her "small steps" approach to euro zone integration unless acute crisis flares again.

The need for further financial support for Greece, Portugal and perhaps Ireland will cause much grumpy debate in Berlin. Frustration at chronic Italian political instability and French aversion to liberal economic reforms will smolder.

Perhaps as important for German policy as the election result may be a ruling by the constitutional court next month on the European Central Bank's bond-buying policy, which calmed the crisis when ECB chief Mario Draghi announced it last year.

The court is not expected to declare it illegal, but it may set conditions that could make the policy hard to implement.