Europa Posted on 2026-04-27 10:26:00

Merz sparks debate on pension system - "Mandatory insurance will only provide basic coverage for old age"

From Dorian Koça

Merz sparks debate on pension system - "Mandatory insurance will only

Pensions have been a hot topic in Germany for many years, but Chancellor Friedrich Merz recently reignited the controversy. "Mandatory pension insurance will at best only provide basic coverage for old age. It will no longer be sufficient to ensure a standard of living in the long term," Merz said.

For this reason, additional funded elements of workplace savings and private pensions are needed, the chancellor said, and to a much greater extent than we currently have, which is based mainly on voluntary participation.

This would mean placing a greater emphasis on stocks and other forms of investment in the future, which would be a controversial strategy because the stock market is subject to large price fluctuations. Today's gains could be tomorrow's losses and vice versa.

The main starting points for all models aimed at securing pensions for the future are demographic trends on the one hand and life expectancy on the other. The low birth rate has serious financial consequences in Germany, as in many other countries. Fewer people in work are paying contributions to the state pension system, while the number of pensioners is increasing.

If you look exclusively at the amount of pension in relation to total income after taxes and social security contributions, Germany ranks in the middle of the list at 53% - well below the OECD average of 61%. Other European countries with large populations such as France and Italy reach figures between 70% and just under 80%.

According to the OECD, the age at which people end their working lives plays an important role in financing pensions. In Germany, people currently retire at an average age of just over 64, almost three years earlier than the statutory retirement age for people born in 1964 or later. Those who retire earlier generally receive a smaller pension.

A unique German situation is the differences between East and West. People who lived and worked in communist East Germany, compared to their working years, have received significantly lower pensions for a long time. The slow convergence to Western levels was not completed until 2025, 35 years after reunification.

Shqipëria 2026-04-25 Lidion Kulla

State Police uncovers online fraud scheme

The State Police informs citizens that an online fraud scheme has been detected, where unidentified perpetrators have created fake websites, similar to the......

Live TV

Latest news
All news

Most visited