SPD politicians criticizing Health Minister Nina Warken's unbalanced health savings package in Bundestag debate, demanding pharma cuts.
SPD politicians criticizing Health Minister Nina Warken's unbalanced health savings package in Bundestag debate, demanding pharma cuts.
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SPD criticizes imbalance in Warken's health savings package

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Days before the planned cabinet decision, the SPD warns against overburdening insured individuals with Health Minister Nina Warken's savings package. The SPD demands more cuts from pharmaceutical companies and efficiency measures. The Greens have presented their own counter-concept.

The SPD parliamentary group has sharply criticized Health Minister Nina Warken's (CDU) savings package. Health policy spokesman Christos Pantazis told the German Press Agency: «From our perspective, the central problem of statutory health insurance lies on the spending side, not the income side». He criticized an «imbalance» as expert proposals for efficiency gains were inadequately addressed.

SPD Secretary General Tim Klüssendorf demanded greater burdens on pharmaceutical companies. «A major lever lies with medicines», he told Funke Mediengruppe newspapers. Germany has the highest per capita drug spending in Europe. The package provides for relieving health funds by 19.6 billion euros next year, with spending caps on practices, clinics, and pharma, as well as higher co-payments.

Minister Warken expressed openness to changes as long as the volume is preserved. In «Bild am Sonntag», she rejected accusations: «We have also put the health funds on duty». The Greens propose lowering contributions by two percentage points by having the federal government cover costs for citizen's money recipients.

Additionally, Warken questioned the number of 93 statutory health funds. «Do we need so many funds?», she asked. CDU Secretary General Carsten Linnemann advocates reducing them to ten.

Mitä ihmiset sanovat

X users criticize Health Minister Nina Warken's savings package for overburdening insured individuals and lacking true efficiency measures, aligning with SPD demands for pharma cuts. Left-leaning voices like Die Linke call for higher contributions from top earners to preserve solidarity. Right-leaning accounts fault SPD for resisting reforms over Bürgergeld financing, exacerbating government rifts. Doctors and associations decry the plans as destructive to healthcare.

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Illustration of German politicians debating health insurance reform: CSU criticizes CDU minister's plans amid SPD rejection.
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CSU criticizes Warken's health reform as unsustainable

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The CSU has sharply criticized Federal Health Minister Nina Warken's (CDU) plans to stabilize statutory health insurance. Bavarian CSU parliamentary leader Klaus Holetschek called for stronger federal budget financing of contributions for Bürgergeld recipients. Finance Minister Lars Klingbeil (SPD) rejects this.

German Health Minister Nina Warken (CDU) has defended her planned savings package, which includes higher financial burdens for nursing home residents. In an ntv show, she admitted imposing cuts on people and viewed the broad criticism as evidence of balance. The draft is set for the federal cabinet on April 29.

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Federal Health Minister Nina Warken's (CDU) draft law to stabilize statutory health insurance—building on her April 14 announcement of the Finance Commission's 66 savings proposals—is now public, aiming for nearly 20 billion euros in relief by 2027. Coalition partners, especially the CSU, criticize the burden distribution amid a looming 15 billion euro deficit.

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.

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German Health Minister Nina Warken is calling for swift implementation of a new law allowing annual prescriptions for chronically ill patients. The measure aims to cut unnecessary doctor visits without raising costs for insurers or contributors. Yet, no concrete agreement on the details has been reached so far.

Vice-Chancellor Lars Klingbeil outlined a reform agenda for the coalition at the Bertelsmann Foundation. He demanded courage from his SPD, as 2026 would require boldness. This comes ahead of negotiations on a major package of measures.

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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.

 

 

 

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