Germany’s important pension reform plan - FT中文网
登录×
电子邮件/用户名
密码
记住我
请输入邮箱和密码进行绑定操作:
请输入手机号码,通过短信验证(目前仅支持中国大陆地区的手机号):
请您阅读我们的用户注册协议隐私权保护政策,点击下方按钮即视为您接受。
养老金

Germany’s important pension reform plan

An ambitious move that could have positive Europe-wide implications
00:00

{"text":[[{"start":6.3,"text":"Just over a year into office, Chancellor Friedrich Merz’s coalition in Germany is deep in the doldrums. Hamstrung by infighting between its centre-right and centre-left partners, it has struggled to reverse Germany’s economic stagnation and waning competitiveness. Three cheers, then, for pension reform proposals unveiled last week with both partners’ apparent backing. This is the boldest move by Merz’s government since the relaxation of the debt brake for investment and defence, with positive implications beyond Germany."}],[{"start":38.199999999999996,"text":"Under proposals agreed by a bipartisan commission, a compulsory initial contribution of 0.5 per cent of employees’ pre-tax income, rising to 2 per cent by 2031, will go into a Swedish-style public pension fund managed centrally and invested in capital markets. Contributions are split 50/50 between employees and employers. The statutory minimum retirement age of 67 is set to rise in line with life expectancy; rights to early retirement for people with 45 years of contributions will be restricted."}],[{"start":71.94999999999999,"text":"Such measures have become vital to reduce the deficits of Germany’s unsustainable pay-as-you-go system. Some 16.5mn baby boomers will retire by 2036 with only 12.5mn new workers joining the workforce, according to some estimates. The government spent about a quarter of the total federal budget on plugging gaps in the system in 2024; economists say that could double to 50 per cent in two decades."}],[{"start":97.49999999999999,"text":"Linking the retirement age to life expectancy is projected to mean only a gradual increase — to 67.5 by 2041 and 70 by 2091. But economists say this is the only sound way to stabilise the system without spiralling payroll taxes or huge federal subsidies. Narrowing early retirement rights will address a drain of experienced workers amid acute skills shortages."}],[{"start":123.94999999999999,"text":"A downside is that the reform will increase social costs for employers — going against Merz’s campaign promise last year to cap social security charges at a time when Germany’s corporate sector is struggling and the economy flatlining. But the chancellor makes a compelling pitch that this as the only way to ensure contributions remain manageable over the long term. "}],[{"start":144.54999999999998,"text":"The 33-point pension plan is also part of a broader planned overhaul of Germany’s welfare state, including health insurance and elderly care. It is vital the coalition presses ahead with the rest of the package, to relieve the burdens on employers. It also needs to set about tackling other overgenerous benefits, including the partial linking of unemployment benefits to prior earnings."}],[{"start":167.7,"text":"The plan could still unravel if MPs ask for too many tweaks and amendments. Assuming it succeeds, however, it will be a big step towards creating a capital market in Germany. Even though it will channel only about €30bn a year, it will nurture an equity investing culture — Germans are heavy savers, but mostly in cash or low-risk products — and create a bigger pool of investment capital. It belatedly brings Germany in line with the likes of Denmark, the Netherlands and Sweden, which acted much earlier to buttress pay-as-you-go models with capital market-funded pillars. It signals to investors that Berlin can still on occasion summon the political will to tackle deep-seated challenges, in contrast to the entrenched political paralysis over pension reform in France. "}],[{"start":215.79999999999998,"text":"It may just, too, aid the EU push towards a capital markets union, long hampered by the historical wariness of the Eurozone’s economic engine towards equity markets. Having a market-funded pension pillar could provide an incentive to support deeper and more integrated European capital markets. It helps Berlin to future-proof its own retirement safety net — and also might help to create the political willpower finally to unlock Europe’s broader financial potential."}],[{"start":250.04999999999998,"text":""}]],"url":"https://audio.ftcn.net.cn/album/a_1782689752_4832.mp3"}

版权声明:本文版权归FT中文网所有,未经允许任何单位或个人不得转载,复制或以任何其他方式使用本文全部或部分,侵权必究。

AI相关股票是否将迎来新一轮震荡?

美国就业市场还撑得住吗?美国与伊朗和平协议是否影响了欧元区通胀?

实现AI潜力的将是机器人,而非聊天机器人

如果将这项科技应用到工厂生产一线,可能会显著提升富裕国家的经济表现。

全世界短裤爱好者,联合起来!

在夏季气温节节攀升之际,坚持穿长裤在穿着上也好、在环保上也罢,都不合情理。

温布尔登梦想的孤独煎熬

在职业网球等级体系的最底层,球员为奖金和排名奔波厮杀,“就像角斗士在为自己的性命而战”。

不,我们远远还谈不上“受够专家”

脱欧十年后,人们对专业人才的信任在提升,但雇主仍然需要更多这样的专业人才。

美国寻求打造“麦当劳式”导弹生产模式

多家防务集团正研发模块化作业车间,以便在战时实现低成本导弹的规模化生产。
设置字号×
最小
较小
默认
较大
最大
分享×