Despite economic stagnation and geopolitical uncertainties, germany saw numerous encouraging developments in 2025 across science, climate protection, and the economy. From more affordable electric cars to improved air quality and higher education spending, these advances offer hope for a brighter future.
The year 2025 brought positive impulses to germany amid crises. According to an overview by the data research team at ln-online.de and kn-online.de, official data published with delay still shaped the past year. The price gap between electric cars and combustion engines fell from €7,640 in september 2024 to €1,650 in november 2025, as industry expert ferdinand dudenhöffer noted in a study. Discounts and cheaper models drove this trend.
A hans-böckler-stiftung study refutes that minimum wage is worse than citizen's income: workers earn hundreds of euros more, despite regional differences due to rents. The happiness atlas of the staatliche klassenlotterien reports a satisfaction index of 7.09 points, more resilient to crises like the ukraine war and inflation.
Education spending rose to €198 billion, €13 billion more than before, or over €2,400 per capita; states contributed €135 billion. The number of centenarians reached 17,900 by end-2024, a quarter more than in 2011, mostly women. Mobility trends show: 26 percent of trips on foot (vs. 22 percent in 2017), public transport at 11 percent.
Alcohol consumption among generation z dropped to 24 percent (vs. 40 percent baby boomers). Plant-based meat substitutes became cheaper than meat in january 2025. Germany leads in stem degrees with over 33 percent (eu average 26 percent). No no₂ limit exceedances in 2024; domestic flights halved since 2019, emissions at 1.1 million tons co₂.
64 percent of 2015 refugees are employed (near population average of 68 percent). Rsv infections in infants halved due to stiko-recommended vaccination since summer 2024. Adhs diagnoses in women rose from 6.7 to 25 per 10,000 (2015-2024), indicating better awareness, per alexandra philipsen. Female professors: 30 percent in 2024 (vs. 10 percent in 1997).