KBV chief Gassen calls for more hospital closures and tax hikes

Andreas Gassen, head of the Kassenärztlicher Bundesverband, advocates for closing more hospitals and expanding ambulatory care in Germany. He criticizes health insurers' cost-cutting plans and demands higher taxes on tobacco and alcohol, plus a sugar tax. The revenues should be earmarked for the health system.

Andreas Gassen, chairman of the Kassenärztlicher Bundesverband (KBV), has called for closing more hospitals in an interview with the Rheinische Post. "We need a concentration of sites and real ambulatization," he emphasized. Hospitals are the biggest cost driver in the health system. At least one in five hospital cases – insurers estimate 60 percent – could be handled on an outpatient basis, more cheaply and patient-friendly.

Gassen sharply criticizes the statutory health insurers' savings plans. The association of health funds intends to cut additional fees for faster appointments from independent doctors and cap budgets for general practitioners and pediatricians again. "This way, the funds are driving the system and the care of people in our country against the wall," Gassen warned. Independent doctors provide 97 percent of care but receive only 16 percent of expenditures: "They are supposed to take on more tasks constantly and receive less money."

Next week, Federal Health Minister Nina Warken (CDU) will present her savings package to relieve the funds through the Bundesrat. Gassen sees savings potential in homeopathy, which should be removed as an insurance benefit. "There is no evidence that homeopathy works," he said; the funds pay 50 million euros annually for it. He also criticized spending on health apps, such as for quitting smoking or alleviating depression, as their benefits are not evaluated.

Instead, Gassen demands higher taxes on alcohol and tobacco, as well as a sugar tax like in Scandinavian countries. The revenues must not disappear into the federal budget but flow earmarked into health care.

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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.

Andreas Gassen, head of the Kassenärztliche Bundesvereinigung (KBV), dismissed demands for a guarantee of specialist doctor appointments within three weeks as „bullshit“ and „socialist regulatory frenzy“. He stressed that appointment allocations must be based on medical need. Gassen was responding to SPD parliamentary group leader Matthias Miersch.

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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.

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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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.

Leading CDU politicians reject the SPD proposal to suspend the debt brake and demand a savings package from Finance Minister Lars Klingbeil (SPD). Tensions in the black-red coalition are rising as Klingbeil prepares the key points for the 2027 budget. The trigger is SPD parliamentary leader Matthias Miersch's push amid the ongoing Iran crisis.

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Saxony-Anhalt's Minister President Sven Schulze has insisted on the states' right to have a say in planned social reforms. He called for close coordination and special consideration of East German concerns. He made these statements in an interview with Germany's Editorial Network (RND).

 

 

 

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