Home » Hubertus Heil: Pensions should rise faster than inflation

Hubertus Heil: Pensions should rise faster than inflation

by admin
Hubertus Heil: Pensions should rise faster than inflation

Economy Hubertus Heil

Pensions should rise faster than inflation

As of: 9:50 a.m. | Reading time: 2 minutes

According to Hubertus Heil, the contribution rate will remain stable

Source: dpa/Hannes P Albert

You can listen to our WELT podcasts here

In order to display embedded content, your revocable consent to the transmission and processing of personal data is necessary, as the providers of the embedded content require this consent as third party providers [In diesem Zusammenhang können auch Nutzungsprofile (u.a. auf Basis von Cookie-IDs) gebildet und angereichert werden, auch außerhalb des EWR]. By setting the switch to “on”, you agree to this (revocable at any time). This also includes your consent to the transfer of certain personal data to third countries, including the USA, in accordance with Art. 49 (1) (a) GDPR. You can find more information about this. You can revoke your consent at any time using the switch and privacy at the bottom of the page.

The Labor Minister predicts a significant increase in pensions. According to initial estimates, they would rise faster than the inflation rate on July 1st. At the same time, Hubertus Heil does not expect any increase in pension contributions for the time being.

According to his own statements, Federal Labor Minister Hubertus Heil (SPD) believes that an increase in pensions above the inflation rate is likely this year. Initial estimates made the federal government “confident that pensions will rise faster than inflation again on July 1st,” Heil told the newspapers of the Funke media group.

The pension increase last year was “not small”, but remained below the inflation rate. “Fortunately, inflation is now falling significantly and there have been decent wage agreements,” said Heil.

See also  He kills his son and then shoots himself - Campania

also read

Demand of employers

Last year, pensions rose by 5.86 percent in the east and by 4.39 percent in the west. Consumer prices in Germany increased by an average of 5.9 percent in 2023 compared to 2022. In January 2024, the inflation rate was 2.9 percent.

Employment in Germany “at record levels”

According to Heil, he does not initially expect any increase in pension contributions. Employment in Germany is “at a record level,” said Heil. The contribution rate has therefore been stable at 18.6 percent since 2018 and will “remain stable for even longer”.

also read

Advertorial Simply invest

The pension reform planned by the federal government should prevent significant increases in the future. Federal Finance Minister Christian Lindner (FDP) and he are “very far along” with the reform and will present the new pension package “in a few weeks,” said.

also read

It is about “securing the pension level in the long term”. Without reform, pensions would “fall significantly” in the coming years, said Heil. The government will prevent this – without further raising the statutory retirement age.

Here you will find content from third parties

In order to display embedded content, your revocable consent to the transmission and processing of personal data is necessary, as the providers of the embedded content require this consent as third party providers [In diesem Zusammenhang können auch Nutzungsprofile (u.a. auf Basis von Cookie-IDs) gebildet und angereichert werden, auch außerhalb des EWR]. By setting the switch to “on”, you agree to this (revocable at any time). This also includes your consent to the transfer of certain personal data to third countries, including the USA, in accordance with Art. 49 (1) (a) GDPR. You can find more information about this. You can revoke your consent at any time using the switch and privacy at the bottom of the page.

You may also like

Leave a Comment

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

This website uses cookies to improve your experience. We'll assume you're ok with this, but you can opt-out if you wish. Accept Read More

Privacy & Cookies Policy