La coalition envisage une hausse de la cotisation de soins pour les personnes sans enfant

La coalition noire-rouge envisage d'augmenter de 0,1 point de pourcentage, à 0,7 %, la majoration de cotisation pour les personnes sans enfant dans l'assurance dépendance. La ministre de la Santé, Nina Warken (CDU), soutient cette idée.

La mesure vise à stabiliser les finances de l'assurance dépendance légale. Les membres sans enfant paient déjà un taux plus élevé que les parents.

La Confédération allemande des syndicats a critiqué la proposition, la qualifiant de discrimination et de sanction. Un recours devant la Cour constitutionnelle fédérale est jugé possible.

En 2001, la Cour avait statué que les parents ne devaient pas supporter la même charge de cotisation que les personnes sans enfant.

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Federal Health Minister Nina Warken announces health insurance savings plans at Berlin press conference.
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Warken presents savings measures for statutory health insurance

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Federal Health Minister Nina Warken (CDU) presented far-reaching savings plans for statutory health insurance (GKV) at a press conference in Berlin on Tuesday. She intends to implement more than three-quarters of an expert commission's 66 proposals to save 20 billion euros starting next year. The funds currently face a deficit of about 15 billion euros.

The German federal government plans to eliminate free co-insurance for spouses in statutory health and long-term care insurance. The move aims to plug budget shortfalls at health insurance funds and will make coverage more expensive for many families. Handelsblatt learned of this from coalition sources.

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In response to last week's Finance Commission on Health report, German Health Minister Nina Warken (CDU) plans to implement only select proposals. She rejects abolishing free co-insurance for childless spouses under six years old and advocates exemptions for caregiving relatives.

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Following Chancellor Merz's announcement that the bill was practically ready, the German government finalized its health reform draft on April 28, targeting 16.3 billion euros in savings from 2027—down from an initial 19.6 billion—to address a 15.3 billion euro deficit at statutory health insurers. The Greens decry it as a burden on insured people and companies, while Health Minister Nina Warken calls it balanced. Cabinet approval is set for Wednesday.

After the Bundesrat blocked the planned tax-free relief premium of up to 1,000 euros, leading politicians are urging a comprehensive income tax reform instead. Manuela Schwesig (SPD) and Markus Söder (CSU) described the premium as failed.

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Amid historically low birth rates in Germany, Thuringia's Minister President Mario Voigt has proposed tax relief for families. In an interview with Stern magazine, he called for exploring new approaches. Births fell to 654,300 last year, the lowest since 1946.

 

 

 

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