German Chancellor Angela Merkel makes a press statement before meeting with the heads of associations of the German economy and the trade unions on the economic consequences of the spread of the coronavirus COVID-19 at the Chancellery in Berlin, Germany March 13, 2020. John Macdougall/Pool via REUTERS

BERLIN (Reuters) - The coronavirus crisis is proving more of an extraordinary situation than the banking crisis, Chancellor Angela Merkel said on Thursday, adding that her government’s focus now was not how its budget works out.

Speaking after meeting the leaders of Germany’s 16 states, Merkel said her finance and economy ministers would present a “very comprehensive” package of additional measures to support German businesses on Friday.

Asked about Germany’s self-imposed policy pledge of not taking on new debt, Merkel said the budget was not her government’s main focus, underlining her message from a day earlier that the public finances were secondary.

“The debt brake ... provides for exceptions in extraordinary situations - and that is, as I said yesterday, really not our topic as to how the budget balance will look in the end,” Merkel told a news conference.

Under the German debt brake rule, the federal government can take on new debt of up to 0.35% of economic output. France has been using the coronavirus crisis to push for more public spending by Germany and other countries with fiscal leeway.

“We are in a situation that is unusual in every respect and I would say more unusual than at the time of the banking crisis because we are dealing with a health problem, a health challenge for which scientists and medicine does not yet have an answer,” Merkel said.

“So it is our task first of all to save people’s lives, as best we can, and secondly to keep economic activity going.”

Merkel said that for regions suffering a dynamic outbreak of coronavirus “the temporary closure of nurseries and schools, for example by bringing forward the Easter holidays, is another option.”

Urging people to avoid social contact where possible, Merkel said the federal and state governments called for events with fewer than 1,000 participants not to go ahead. Previously, it had urged a halt to public gatherings with more than 1,000.