Health commission presents 66 savings proposals for insurers

Following coalition negotiations and a December 2025 mediation effort on her stalled savings law, Federal Health Minister Nina Warken (CDU) received a major boost on Monday as a government-appointed commission of ten scientists presented a 480-page report with 66 reform measures for statutory health insurers in Berlin. The proposals aim to close a projected 15.3 billion euro deficit next year and generate over 40 billion euros in short- to medium-term savings, preventing contribution increases.

The finance commission, comprising experts in economics, medicine, and health research, worked without taboos. The Handelsblatt-obtained report builds on ongoing efforts to relieve statutory health insurers amid stalled reforms over issues like clinic reimbursements.

Warken must now select from the extensive catalog and secure coalition agreement to distribute the burden fairly. She has described the report as a 'toolbox' for her savings package, echoing her earlier optimism ahead of mediation.

Key measures include drug price regulations, new rules for doctors, benefit cuts, higher co-payments, reduced sick pay, a sugar tax, and elimination of homeopathic services. Some will impact patients noticeably.

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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.

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.

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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.

German Finance Minister Lars Klingbeil (SPD) detailed specific savings targets for the 2027 federal budget at a press conference in Berlin. The measures aim to close a 111 billion euro financing gap. The largest cuts target pensions at four billion euros.

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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.

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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The German federal government under Finance Minister Lars Klingbeil (SPD) failed to agree with the Union on budget savings. Instead, taxes on alcohol, tobacco, and cryptocurrencies are set to rise, with new levies on sugar and plastic. The measures appear in the 2027 budget draft to be presented to the cabinet on Wednesday.

 

 

 

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