Germany's pension plans draw praise and outrage
Key takeaways
- A 30-point plan to reform Germany's pension system has drawn praise and criticism in almost equal measure.
- The 13-person commission's detailed report is due to be officially released on Tuesday, but the main proposals were leaked to the German media this weekend, drawing a flurry of reactions.
- Federal Labor Minister Bärbel Bas, of the center-left Social Democratic Party (SPD) also defended the need for reforms.
Why this matters: an international story with cross-border implications worth tracking.
A 30-point plan to reform Germany's pension system has drawn praise and criticism in almost equal measure. Centrist politicians have called it a good compromise, opposition parties on the left and right are unhappy.
https://p.dw.com/p/5Frn1In 2026, over 21 million retirees in Germany receive pensions from the statutory pension insurance system Image: Jan Woitas/dpa/picture alliance Advertisement The 30 pension reform proposals put forward by a specially-convened commission of experts and politicians have met with praise from conservative political groups and outcry from opposition parties and trade unionsin Germany.
The 13-person commission's detailed report is due to be officially released on Tuesday, but the main proposals were leaked to the German media this weekend, drawing a flurry of reactions. Government circles in Berlin say the Cabinet is expected to agree on a plan based on the reforms in the near future.