As the April 29 cabinet decision approaches, Health Minister Nina Warken and Finance Minister Lars Klingbeil signal openness to adjustments in the statutory health insurance savings package, originally based on the Finance Commission's 66 proposals. Following the recent draft release and coalition disputes, associations and opposition intensify criticisms.
Building on the Finance Commission's 66 savings proposals—presented earlier this month and partially adopted in Health Minister Nina Warken's (CDU) draft unveiled last week—the reform aims to relieve statutory health insurances by nearly 20 billion euros ahead of a projected 15 billion euro deficit in 2027. The package is slated for cabinet approval on April 29.
In the ARD program 'Bericht aus Berlin,' Warken addressed rising additional contributions, which have doubled in recent years, and affirmed willingness for parliamentary changes. Finance Minister Lars Klingbeil (SPD) highlighted imbalances affecting the insured. Key contention points include a planned 3.5 percent surcharge from 2028 for contribution-free spouse co-insurance (exempting children, parents of young children, and caregivers) and funding for health costs of Bürgergeld recipients, currently burdening insurers by up to 12 billion euros.
CSU leader Markus Söder calls for shifting these costs to tax funding with budget offsets. Klingbeil, in ZDF's 'Berlin direkt,' urged sustainable solutions beyond mere shifts. Doctors' association Marburger Bund criticizes a shift to 'finance-driven care,' while Sozialverband Deutschland deems sick pay cuts 'unsolidary.' On April 19, panel doctors and the Deutsche Krankenhausgesellschaft held a press conference voicing reservations. Discussions also target consolidating over 90 health funds.