
Germany’s Pension Reform Push: Merz Backs Swedish Model and Later Retirement
Chancellor Friedrich Merz pledged to enact all 33 recommendations from a government-appointed commission, including a capital-funded pillar and a retirement age linked to life expectancy, declaring failure “not an option”.
The German government’s pension commission delivered a unanimous reform blueprint on Tuesday, and within hours Chancellor Friedrich Merz and Labour Minister Bärbel Bas committed to implementing the package in full. The 33 recommendations aim to stabilise a system strained by an ageing population, where 23 percent of citizens are already over 65. Merz told reporters in Berlin that “doing nothing is not an option” and that the measures must be adopted swiftly, with a timeline to be discussed at a coalition committee on 1 July.
At the core of the proposal is a mandatory capital-funded component modelled on Sweden’s AP7 state fund. Starting in 2028, an additional contribution—rising from 0.5 to 2 percent of gross wages—would flow into individual investment accounts, either through a public fund or licensed private alternatives. The commission also recommends gradually raising the statutory retirement age beyond 67 in line with life expectancy, abolishing the popular “Rente mit 63” early-retirement scheme, and extending compulsory contributions to civil servants and the self-employed. Merz described the integration of a capital pillar into the statutory system as a “genial” departure from his earlier preference for mandatory occupational pensions, while Bas called the package a “Gesamtkunstwerk” that must not be cherry-picked.
Reactions from German stakeholders revealed the political balancing act ahead. Trade unions, including the DGB and Verdi, condemned the end of early retirement as a disregard for workers’ lifetime achievements and insisted that any capital-funded element remain outside the statutory system. Employer associations warned that the additional contribution would raise already high non-wage labour costs, while the insurance industry fears losing business to a state-run fund. Within the coalition, the centre-left SPD signalled support, though parliamentary leaders acknowledged that lawmakers would not simply rubber-stamp the commission’s work. International observers note that the reform mirrors long-standing Nordic practices, yet Germany’s debate is shaped by its own history of pension promises and a fractious coalition with a thin parliamentary majority.
The pension push arrives as the government struggles to revive credibility after a year of sluggish economic performance and internal disputes. Germany’s economy is projected to grow just 0.5 percent this year, weighed down by high energy costs, trade tensions, and the fallout from conflicts in Iran and Ukraine. A parallel debate over energy security—including whether to extend coal-fired power beyond the 2030 phase-out target—underscores the broader pressure on industrial competitiveness. In that context, the pension reform is viewed in Berlin as a potential turning point, with some younger lawmakers likening it to a “Joker” that could reset the government’s fortunes.
The next milestone is the coalition committee meeting in early July, where leaders must agree on a concrete implementation schedule. Even with top-level commitment, the package faces scrutiny in the Bundestag, where the government holds only a narrow minority. The commission’s co-chair, Constanze Janda, noted that the proposed retirement-age increase would be “moderate”—roughly six months per decade if life expectancy trends continue—but the political test will be whether the coalition can hold together through the legislative process without unpicking the carefully balanced trade-offs.
How the same story is told elsewhere.
2 editorial groups · 4 languages
German media frame the pension reform as a historic shift: the commission recommends a Swedish-style funded pillar, raising the retirement age to 70, and scrapping minijobs. Chancellor Merz vows to implement the full package despite stiff resistance from unions and employers.
The German reform is absent; instead, a Brazilian radio show debates whether a private pension fund or a government bond is better for retirement, highlighting long-term tax benefits. The issue is framed as an individual financial choice, detached from German politics.
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