Experts slam SPD's retirement age-contribution link as coalition tensions rise

Economists criticize the SPD's proposal to tie retirement age to contribution years, warning of disadvantages for academics and the erosion of solidarity-based pensions. Amid ongoing reform debates sparked by Jens Südekum's idea and mixed public opinion, coalition frictions intensify ahead of the pension commission's report.

Building on economist Jens Südekum's earlier proposal—which drew divided public support in a 2024 Forsa survey, with stronger backing from CDU/CSU and AfD voters—tensions are escalating in Berlin's Union-SPD coalition over pension reforms.

Chancellor Friedrich Merz recently suggested statutory pensions as a mere basic safety net, prompting SPD outrage. The pension commission, tasked with securing living standards across statutory, occupational, and private pillars per the coalition agreement, is due to present its concept in eight weeks.

The SPD is now advancing Südekum's idea of linking retirement age to individual contribution years. However, economists warn this could dismantle the solidarity principle, hitting academics hardest due to later career starts from prolonged education.

This push reignites debates following the Bundestag's prior pension package approval, highlighting persistent divides in Germany's pension reform saga.

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German Chancellor Friedrich Merz addressing bankers in Berlin, urging reforms in energy, pensions, and health insurance.
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Friedrich Merz urges SPD toward more reforms

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Chancellor Friedrich Merz has called on coalition partner SPD to lift blockades on reform projects. At an event of the German Banks Association in Berlin, he announced serious talks for the evening. Energy policy, pension reform, and statutory health insurance are in focus.

Several CDU politicians have distanced themselves from Chancellor Friedrich Merz’s comments on statutory pensions. Merz described pensions as at most a “basic security” for old age. Saxony-Anhalt’s premier Sven Schulze particularly urges consideration of the East German situation.”

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Following backlash to his recent comments, Chancellor Friedrich Merz (CDU) assured no cuts to statutory pensions at a CDU event. Saxony-Anhalt Premier Sven Schulze (CDU) reiterated demands for pension reform to address East Germany's unique reliance on state pensions.

Manuela Schwesig, minister president of Mecklenburg-Vorpommern, has criticized federal health minister Nina Warken's plans for nursing care reform. She sees them as shifting problems onto the weakest. DAK chief Andreas Storm also called for a reform moratorium.

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The black-red coalition agreed with employers and unions on further talks on reforms during a meeting at the Chancellery. The goal is to strengthen Germany’s competitiveness.

Germany's black-red federal government aims to pass a package of reforms covering taxes, the labor market, pensions and bureaucracy reduction before the summer break. A further coalition committee meeting shortly before the parliamentary summer recess in early July is set to make the decisions. Chancellor Friedrich Merz will invite social partners to the chancellery in early June.

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The SPD parliamentary group has opposed flat cuts to parental allowance. Family Minister Karin Prien of the CDU faces pressure to save 500 million euros.

 

 

 

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