Germany's pension system will collapse without reform, influential lobby group says
Germany's pension system will collapse without reform, employment association president tells German newspaper Bild.
The German pension system won't be financially viable in five years' time, employment association President Rainer Dulger warns.
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Germany's pension system won't be financially viable in five years' time without reform, according to Rainer Dulger, the president of the Confederation of German Employers' Associations.
The influential lobby group represents around 20 million employees in the German workforce. Dulger told Germany's Bild am Sonntag newspaper Sunday that the German economy is weakening and the social system is on "the verge of collapse."
"The costs will explode," he said, according to a translation by CNBC.
In 2019, contributions into Germany's public pension plans represented around 10.1% of the nation's GDP, but this is expected to increase to 12.2% by 2070 under the current system, according to The 2021 Ageing Report published by the European Commission.
That 2 percentage point increase is one of the highest forecasted changes in the European Economic Area, beaten only by Ireland and Norway, where the contribution to the public pension systems is expected to be 2.6 percentage points higher in 2070, and the Netherlands, where the percentage of GDP spent on pensions will be 2.2 points higher in five decades' time.
Labor shortages and an aging population are contributing to the challenges faced by the German pension system. Dulger suggested retirement age should be tied to life expectancy, saying it "shouldn't be the case that increasing life expectancy leads to longer retirements."
But German Chancellor Olaf Scholz rejected calls to hike the standard retirement age from 67 to 68 in June 2021 when he was finance minister.
"It's not only based on wrong calculations, it's also socially unfair," Scholz said at the time, as reported by Reuters.
Scholz also said there "is no real need" to increase the retirement age, despite a panel of governmental economic advisors suggesting the threshold should be pushed to 68 by 2024.
Dulger: Pensions are as serious as climate change
The scale of reform needed hasn't been seen since the period of German reunification in the 1990s, according to Dulger, which was when East and West Germany reunited after 45 years of separation following World War II.
The West German pension system was extended to East Germany, causing years of financial upheaval.
Dulger also said the country's pension system should be taken as seriously as climate change, and suggested it should be included in social policy forecasts to highlight the urgency of the situation.
"Reforming the social security system is as challenging as the energy transition, and without doubt as important for intergenerational justice," Dulger told Bild.