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Document 52014SC0406
COMMISSION STAFF WORKING DOCUMENT Assessment of the 2014 national reform programme and stability programme for GERMANY Accompanying the document Recommendation for a COUNCIL RECOMMENDATION on Germany's 2014 national reform programme and delivering a Council opinion on Germany’s 2014 stability programme
COMMISSION STAFF WORKING DOCUMENT Assessment of the 2014 national reform programme and stability programme for GERMANY Accompanying the document Recommendation for a COUNCIL RECOMMENDATION on Germany's 2014 national reform programme and delivering a Council opinion on Germany’s 2014 stability programme
COMMISSION STAFF WORKING DOCUMENT Assessment of the 2014 national reform programme and stability programme for GERMANY Accompanying the document Recommendation for a COUNCIL RECOMMENDATION on Germany's 2014 national reform programme and delivering a Council opinion on Germany’s 2014 stability programme
/* SWD/2014/0406 final */
COMMISSION STAFF WORKING DOCUMENT Assessment of the 2014 national reform programme and stability programme for GERMANY Accompanying the document Recommendation for a COUNCIL RECOMMENDATION on Germany's 2014 national reform programme and delivering a Council opinion on Germany’s 2014 stability programme /* SWD/2014/0406 final */
CONTENTS Executive summary. 3 1............ Introduction. 5 2............ Economic situation and outlook. 5 3............ Challenges and assessment of policy
agenda. 7 3.1......... Fiscal policy and taxation. 7 3.2......... Financial sector 14 3.3......... Labour market, education and social
policies. 16 3.4......... Structural measures promoting sustainable
growth and competitiveness. 21 3.5......... Modernisation of public administration. 25 4............ Conclusions. 26 Overview table. 28 Annex... ... 32
Executive summary
Germany’s real GDP growth is projected to accelerate to 1.8 % in 2014
with domestic demand expected to remain the key growth driver. Favourable financing conditions and dissipating uncertainty should underpin
the gradual recovery in equipment investment, while the robust labour market
and low interest rates should further support private consumption and housing
investment. Although exports will likely regain momentum, this is expected to
be outpaced by imports which are rising on the back of domestic demand. Unemployment
is projected to see a further gradual decline. With energy prices falling,
inflation is expected to decelerate to 1.1 % in 2014, despite the
upward pressure from core inflation that largely reflects increasing labour
market tightness. The new federal government
is carrying out a number of reforms but overall, Germany has made limited
progress in addressing the 2013 country‑specific recommendations. It has maintained a sound fiscal position, but has made limited
progress in enhancing the growth-friendliness of public expenditure and the tax
system. The recent pension reform aims to improve pensions and early retirement
conditions for certain groups, but puts an additional strain on the
sustainability of the pension system and leads to increasing pension
contributions and thus potentially to a higher tax wedge for the active labour
force, including low-wage earners. Germany has made limited progress in
improving incentives to work and the employability of workers. The government
plans to introduce a general minimum wage of EUR 8.50 an hour, which could
have a positive impact on wages at the low end of the distribution, and to
increase the coverage of collective bargaining agreements. However, the effect
of the new minimum wage on disposable income and domestic demand could be
limited, especially over time, by its potential employment effects, its
interactions with tax and benefit schemes, and its potential impact on prices. Moreover,
the federal government has adopted a proposal for a revision of the Renewable
Energy Act. If implemented in a timely and comprehensive manner, this would contribute
to increase the cost-effectiveness of the support for renewable energies. The
government has not taken significant measures to increase competition in the
service and railway sectors. The 2014 national reform
programme announces Germany's plans to address
shortcomings in relevant areas, but in some cases planned measures do not
appear to address the challenges in a comprehensive way. To stimulate domestic sources of growth and increase potential
growth, Germany needs to enhance the growth-friendliness of its public
finances, raise labour supply and human capital, deal with the challenges posed
by the transformation of the energy system (Energiewende), and raise investment
and productivity. ·
Public finances: Germany is in a
sound fiscal position overall, but at the same time appears to have scope for
enhancing the growth-friendliness of its public finances. Higher investment in
public infrastructure and human capital, more cost-effective healthcare and
long-term care and a more efficient tax system could contribute to raising
potential growth, but new pension benefits put a strain on the sustainability
of the pension system. ·
Labour market and education: Demographic change is expected to affect Germany’s potential growth
and skills shortages are emerging in some regions and sectors. At the same
time, unemployment in some regions remains relatively high and there is scope
for increasing the work volume and education performance among certain groups. ·
Energy: The Energiewende
opens the door to new growth opportunities and helps reduce Germany’s dependence on external energy sources, but also involves challenges in terms of
potentially high economic costs and the need for additional internal and
cross-border infrastructure, and enhanced coordination with neighbouring
countries. ·
Competition and productivity: Barriers to competition persist in the service and railway sectors.
Productivity growth in professional services is low. The EU-wide publication
rate for public contracts is very low. Moreover, there is a need for further
consolidation in the banking sector. ·
Domestic sources of growth: The first in-depth review of Germany under the Macroeconomic
Imbalances Procedure found that the country’s current‑account surplus is the
result of an interplay of various factors and developments which resulted in muted
domestic demand and a weaker growth performance than could have been attained with
a more balanced growth pattern.
1.
Introduction
In
May 2013, the Commission proposed a set of country-specific recommendations (CSRs)
for economic and structural reform policies for Germany. On the basis of these
recommendations, the Council of the European Union adopted four country-specific
recommendations in the form of a Council Recommendation in July 2013. These country-specific
recommendations concerned public finances, the labour market, education, energy,
public procurement and the service, railway and financial sectors. This staff
working document (SWD) assesses the state of implementation of these
recommendations in Germany. The
SWD assesses policy measures in light of the findings of the Commission’s 2014 Annual
Growth Survey (AGS)[1]
and the third annual Alert Mechanism Report (AMR),[2] which
were published in November 2013. The AGS sets out the Commission’s proposals
for building the necessary common understanding about the priorities for policy
action at national and EU level in 2014. It identifies five priorities to guide
Member States to renewed growth: pursuing differentiated, growth‑friendly
fiscal consolidation; restoring normal lending to the economy; promoting growth
and competitiveness for today and tomorrow; tackling unemployment and the
social consequences of the crisis; and modernising public administration. The
AMR serves as an initial screening device to ascertain whether macroeconomic
imbalances exist or risk emerging in Member States. The AMR found positive
signs that macroeconomic imbalances in Europe are being corrected. To ensure
that a complete and durable rebalancing is achieved, Germany and 15 other
Member States were selected for a review of developments in the accumulation
and unwinding of imbalances (Box 3).[3] These
in-depth reviews were published on 5 March 2014 along with a Commission Communication.[4] Against
the background of the 2013 Council Recommendation, the AGS, the AMR and the
in-depth review, Germany presented a national reform programme (NRP) on 14 April
2014 and a stability programme and an updated draft budgetary plan on 8 April 2014.
These programmes provide detailed information on progress made since July 2013
and on the government’s plans. The information contained in these programmes
provides the basis for the assessment made in this SWD. The programmes underwent a consultation
process involving the Länder and stakeholders, and were formally
submitted to the federal parliament and the federal council.
2.
Economic situation
and outlook
Economic situation Real GDP rose by
0.4 % in 2013, after a 0.7 % increase in 2012. The rise was
essentially driven by private consumption, but government consumption also made
a small positive contribution. Investment initially continued to show weakness,
which also reflected the prevailing uncertainty caused by the debt crisis and
the slowdown in global economic activity, but saw a gradual expansion from the
second quarter onwards. In annual terms, investment acted as a slight drag on
growth, while the contribution of net external trade was neutral. The
current‑account surplus remained high. According to
revised balance of payments statistics, the surplus stood at 7.5 % of GDP in
2013, up from 7.4 % in 2012 and 6.8 % in 2011. The slight increase in 2013 was
driven in particular by the trade balance, while the contribution of the
balance on current transfers was slightly negative. While the surplus vis‑à‑vis
the rest of the world remained on an upward trend, that vis-à-vis the
euro area continued to decline. The
labour market continued to perform favourably in 2013.
Employment rose by another 0.6 % and the unemployment rate dropped to a
record-low average of 5.3 %. These labour market developments, together with
firms’ consistently strong international competitiveness and favourable
financing conditions, underpin the intact fundamentals of the German economy.
Headline inflation fell to 1.6 %, in particular owing to easing energy price
pressures. Economic outlook According
to the Commission 2014 spring forecast, some acceleration of economic growth is
expected, followed by stabilisation at quite robust rates.
Real GDP growth of 1.8 % in 2014 and 2.0 % in 2015 is expected, according to
the forecast. Domestic demand is expected to remain the key growth driver.
Notably, favourable financing conditions and dissipating uncertainty should
lead to a gradual recovery in equipment investment after its weakness despite
supportive conditions in 2012-13, while low interest rates and a robust labour
market should further support private consumption and housing investment.
Exports should regain momentum, but are expected to be outpaced by imports on
the back of dynamic domestic demand, notably as regards machinery and equipment
investment. This should contribute to a gradual narrowing of the significant
current‑account surplus over the forecast horizon, although this is still set
to remain above 6 % of GDP. Employment
is forecast to rise by 0.6 % this year and by 0.3 % in 2015.
However, with significant net migration and rising labour market participation
continuing to buoy labour supply, only a slight further decrease in the already
low unemployment rate is expected. The robust labour market developments should
continue to lead to sustained wage increases in nominal and real terms. The
dampening impact on headline inflation of further easing food and energy price
pressure is expected to be largely offset by gradually rising core inflation on
the back of a narrowing output gap and rising labour costs. Overall, consumer
prices are projected to increase by 1.1 % in 2014 and 1.4 % in 2015. Commission
estimates indicate that potential output will grow at around 1½ % per year
in 2014‑15, followed by a gradual decline in 2016-18 to around 1 %. The
negative output gap is expected to narrow significantly by 2015. The ongoing expansion
takes place on the basis of sound economic fundamentals. However, Germany still has scope for improving its potential growth rate, which has seen a trend
decline and remains low. Intensifying population ageing is imminent, which
accentuates the key challenge of strengthening potential growth. The
NRP and the stability programme share the same macroeconomic outlook, which is
broadly in line with the Commission 2014 spring forecast as
regards the pace and pattern of economic growth in 2014 and 2015, as well as
with the Commission’s estimate of Germany’s medium-term potential growth rate.
Taking into account the pronounced easing of inflationary pressures in early
2014 on the back of oil price and exchange rate developments, the authorities' projections
for the private consumption deflator in 2014 appear slightly on the high side.[5] The
NRP and the stability programme do not provide estimates of the quantitative
impact on economic growth of specific reform measures and do not specify
whether their impact is explicitly considered in its macroeconomic outlook.
3.
Challenges and assessment of policy agenda
3.1.
Fiscal policy and taxation
Germany’s
current fiscal position is sound, but the level of public debt remains high and
there are still inefficiencies in some spending policies and in the tax system. At
about 78 % in 2013, government debt as a percentage of GDP is still well
above the 60 % Treaty reference value. There is scope for improving the
efficiency of healthcare and long-term care. Expenditure on education is
relatively low by international standards and spending on public infrastructure
has been on a downward trend for a long time, resulting in an investment
backlog at municipal level in particular. The tax burden on labour is high and
there appears to be potential for shifting towards more growth-friendly revenue
sources. Germany has
preserved its sound fiscal position in line with the 2013 country-specific
recommendation, but has made limited progress in pursuing a growth-friendly
fiscal policy and implementing the constitutional balanced budget rule at
subnational level. The country-specific recommendation covered
the overall fiscal position and compliance with the medium-term budgetary
objective, the cost-effectiveness of public spending on healthcare and
long-term care, increased expenditure on education and research, the efficiency
of the tax system and the implementation of the ‘debt brake’ at Länder
level. Budgetary developments and debt
dynamics Germany’s
2014 stability programme aims at a balanced general government budget,
complying with the medium-term budgetary objective with a margin and steadily
bringing down the debt-to-GDP ratio over the programme period. The
stability programme confirms the medium-term objective of a structural deficit
no higher than 0.5 % of GDP, which reflects the objectives of the
Stability and Growth Pact. A structural surplus of ½ % of GDP is expected
throughout the programme period. The plan is to reduce the debt ratio to less
than 70% of GDP by the end of 2017 and to less than 60 % within 10 years. Germany
recorded a balanced general government budget in 2013 and thus achieved a
budgetary position somewhat above its deficit target of ½ % of GDP set in
last year’s stability programme. While growth and revenues turned
out as expected, the expenditure-to-GDP ratio was somewhat lower than initially
planned. The projections of last year’s stability programme and draft budgetary
plan have been retained with an expected balanced budget in both 2014 and 2015,
which is broadly in line with the Commission spring 2014 forecast of a balanced
budget for 2014 and a slight deficit of 0.1 % of GDP for 2015 (see Table
III in the annex). All levels of government are expected to register balanced
budgets. The
continued balanced general government budget is planned to go hand in hand with
slightly falling revenue and expenditure ratios. Both the
revenue and expenditure ratios are projected to decline slightly from
44½ % of GDP to 44 % in the coming years. The total tax-to-GDP ratio
is planned to remain constant over the programme period, while other revenue –
which includes for example profit transfers from Deutsche Bundesbank –
is expected to grow somewhat more slowly than GDP. As regards expenditure,
above-average growth is projected notably in social transfers in kind and
below-average growth in interest expenditure. The stability programme factors
in the recent pension reform and other expenditure measures of the new federal
government, although it does not fully specify their budgetary impact (see
Box 1). No significant one-off measures are foreseen during the programme
period. Overall, the budgetary targets are broadly in line with the Commission
2014 spring forecast and appear realistic. Box 1. Main measures The recent pension reform can be expected to have the strongest budgetary impact of all the measures adopted and proposed by the new federal government (see subsection on long-term sustainability). However, the stability programme does not specify the impact of the reform on expenditure and revenues of the pension insurance and refers merely to an additional federal subsidy to the pension insurance of almost EUR 2 billion over the legislative period. The federal government plans additional spending on education and research over the next four years, including EUR 6 billion to be provided to support the Länder in financing childcare facilities, schools and higher education institutions and EUR 3 billion for the funding of non-university research institutes, the Higher Education Pact, the Pact for Research and Innovation and the Initiative for Excellence. Additional EUR 5 billion are planned from the federal budget for investment in public transport infrastructure, EUR 2 billion for official development assistance and EUR 600 million for urban development. Resources allocated for integrating jobseekers into the labour market will be increased by EUR 1.4 billion by 2017 by improving the effective transferability of budgetary resources from one fiscal year to the next. The stability programme does not further specify the allocation of the expenditure across years over the legislative period, but the measures can be expected to have overall a limited budgetary impact.[6] · Germany
registered a structural surplus of 0.6 % of GDP in 2013 and thus complied
with its medium-term budgetary objective with a margin. According
to the stability programme, the (recalculated) structural surplus[7]
will stay at 0.6 % of GDP in 2014 and decrease to 0.4 % of GDP in
2015, which is broadly in line with the Commission’s forecast of a structural
surplus of 0.5 % of GDP in 2014 and 0.0 % of GDP in 2015. The
structural balance is planned to remain positive in the following years. Hence,
Germany plans to achieve its medium-term objective throughout the programme
period with a margin, which means that compliance with the expenditure
benchmark is not assessed as it is intended to underpin the necessary
adjustment towards the medium-term objective. The
debt-to-GDP ratio decreased by 2.6 pps. to 78.4 % in 2013 and is planned
to fall further throughout the programme period. The decline in
2013 was driven largely by the winding up of ‘bad banks’, which is expected to continue
to contribute to the falling debt ratio in the years to come as well as the
denominator effect of GDP growth. This is broadly in line with the
Commission’s forecast of a debt-to-GDP ratio of 76.0 % in 2014 and 73.6 %
in 2015, which does not take into account potential gains from the winding up
of ‘bad banks’ (see Table IV in the annex). Government debt is above the 60 %
of GDP Treaty reference value and, following the correction of the excessive
deficit in 2011, Germany is in a transition period of three years as regards
the debt reduction benchmark starting from 2012. Germany made sufficient
progress towards compliance with the debt reduction benchmark in 2013. Both the
stability programme and the Commission forecast indicate that Germany will meet the debt benchmark at the end of the transition period in 2014. Based on
a no-policy-change scenario, the debt-to-GDP ratio is projected to decrease to close
to the 60 % reference value in 2030. The implementation of the stability
programme would put debt on a further decreasing path, bringing it below the
reference value in 2030 (see chart in Annex). As
regards the recommendation to use available scope for increased
growth-enhancing spending, Germany has made limited progress in raising
expenditure on education and some progress concerning more research spending. Total
public and private expenditure on education and research, which the federal and
Länder governments agreed to increase to 10 % of GDP by 2015, is
estimated to have remained stable at 9.3 % of GDP in 2011 and 2012.[8]
Public
spending on education decreased from 4.4 % of GDP in 2011 to 4.3 % in 2012 and
remained well below the EU-28 average of 5.3 %. In contrast, expenditure on
research and development, which is mainly provided by the private sector,
increased from 2.89 % of GDP in 2011 to estimated 2.98 % in 2012, and
is therefore close to the Europe 2020 target of 3 % and well above the
EU-28 average of 2.07 %,[9]
although other economies in and outside the EU, such as Finland, Sweden and
South Korea, are investing even more. The new federal government plans
continued contributions to the financing of childcare facilities, schools,
higher education and research (see Box 1). However,
further efforts appear necessary at all levels of government to meet the 10 %
expenditure target, and even more ambitious follow-up targets would be needed
to catch up with the most innovative economies.[10]
Besides increasing expenditure, it remains important to improve outcomes in the
education system (see Section 3.3) and to help start-up companies access
venture capital (see Section 3.4). An
additional challenge stems from insufficient investment in public
infrastructure. Gross public investment as a proportion of GDP has
been on a downward trend for a long time in Germany and has fallen
significantly below the euro‑area average. Public net investment has even been
negative since 2003.[11]
The fall in public investment has taken place almost entirely at the municipal
level, probably also resulting from limited funding for municipalities.
Evidence suggests that transport infrastructure has been affected in particular
by falling real investment, notably with respect to Länder, county and
municipal roads and local public transport.[12]
Moreover, the age structure of overall transport infrastructure and the state
of federal roads, federal road bridges and rail bridges has worsened.[13] Germany has
increased infrastructure investment in recent years and plans to step it up
further, but this does not appear to be enough to deal with the backlog.
Investment in public infrastructure has been strengthened by the 2009 stimulus
package and additional funding for federal transport infrastructure and
extending childcare facilities. The stability programme includes plans for
additional funds to be provided over the next four years for investment in
childcare facilities,
schools
and universities, transport infrastructure and urban development (see
Box 1). Moreover, the coalition agreement of the new federal government[14]
announces additional EUR 5 billion annually to partly compensate
municipalities for social expenditure, which should also increase their fiscal
space for investment. Public investment already gained momentum last year with
gross fixed capital formation increasing by 3.5 % at the general
government level and by 12 % at municipal level. However, current developments
and policy plans seem to fall short of the additional annual investment of ½ to
1 % of GDP for the public sector as a whole over the coming years that the
in-depth review of the German economy identified as necessary to maintain and
modernise Germany’s public infrastructure and remove specific bottlenecks. Fiscal framework Germany has
made some progress as regards the 2013 country-specific recommendation to
complete the implementation of the constitutional balanced-budget rule (‘debt
brake’) in a consistent manner across all Länder. The
federal constitution stipulates structurally balanced budgets for the Länder
also as from 2020. Unlike for the federal budget, however, it does not lay down
more specific implementing provisions, which are the sole responsibility of the
Länder themselves. In 2013, Bavaria and Saxony amended their
constitutions, so that to date seven Länder have enshrined
balanced-budget rules in their constitutions and four in their budget laws.[15]
Baden-Württemberg and Hessen supplemented their debt brakes by laying down
specific implementing rules in an administrative order and a law, respectively.
The rules set decreasing annual borrowing ceilings for the transition period to
2020 and include provisions for financial transactions, the cyclical adjustment
of the deficit, exemption clauses for natural disasters and other emergencies,
and a control account recording deviations in budget execution from the
authorised level of borrowing. Similar provisions existed before only in
Rhineland-Palatinate and Schleswig‑Holstein.[16]
On the other hand, Berlin, Brandenburg, Bremen, North Rhine‑Westphalia and Saarland have not enshrined balanced budget rules in their legislation and the majority of Länder
have not laid down detailed implementing rules. The
fiscal framework has been supplemented by a national balanced-budget rule and
the establishment of an independent advisory board. The law
transposing the Fiscal Compact (Fiskalvertragsumsetzungsgesetz), which
took effect in July 2013, complements the existing balanced-budget rules for
the federation, the Länder and social insurances with a deficit ceiling
and a correction mechanism at general government level. The existing Stability
Council (Stabilitätsrat), which consists of the federal and Länder
ministers for finance and the federal Minister for Economic Affairs and Energy,
will have a prominent role in enforcing the new rules. To comply with the
Fiscal Compact, an independent advisory board (unabhängiger Beirat) to
the Stability Council has been established. The board is expected to issue
public statements on compliance with the deficit ceiling and recommendations
for corrective action in the event of non-compliance. Practical
steps may be needed to ensure that budget projections are based on fully
compliant macroeconomic forecasts and to adapt the schedule of the established
national procedures to the new European cycle of budgetary monitoring. Germany’s
federal budget and fiscal projections at general government level are based on
the federal government’s own macroeconomic forecasts. While for the
government’s spring and autumn projections the independent joint economic
forecast issued twice a year by leading research institutes is used as a
benchmark, they are not formally endorsed by an independent body within the
meaning of Regulation (EU) No 473/2013. The stability programme is based on an
additional forecast, which is usually published in January as part of the
government's Annual Economic Report and prepared without using an updated independent
joint economic forecast as a benchmark. Moreover, the draft budgetary plan
submitted in October 2013 drew on the not up-to-date spring versions of the
macroeconomic and tax revenue projections, because the autumn versions of the
government’s macroeconomic projections, the joint economic forecast and the
projections of the working party on tax revenue forecasting are usually
published after the submission deadline for the draft budgetary plan. The
planned review of fiscal relations could further strengthen the framework for
sustainable fiscal policies in Germany. Effective
application of the debt brake will require sufficient scope for fiscal policy
to adjust revenue and expenditure also at sub-national level. Moreover,
existing financing mechanisms including investment-related allocations from the
Länder and the federal budget have not prevented the emergence of an
investment backlog in public infrastructure at municipal level. The current
allocation of tax revenues and the design of the horizontal fiscal equalisation
system (Länderfinanzausgleich) may also lead to disincentives regarding
tax collection.[17]
Therefore, the review of fiscal relations announced in the coalition agreement
of the new federal government is an opportunity to strengthen fiscal
responsibility and accountability by improving the allocation of revenue and
expenditure competences between the federation, Länder and
municipalities and reviewing the efficiency of the fiscal equalisation system. Long-term sustainability Germany
appears to face medium fiscal sustainability risks in the medium term. The
medium-term sustainability gap,[18]
showing the adjustment effort up to 2020 required to bring the debt ratio to
60% of GDP in 2030, is at 0.1 % of GDP, primarily related to the high
level of government debt (73.6 % of GDP in 2015) and the projected ageing
costs[19]
(contributing with 0.8 pp. of GDP until 2030) that are partially offset by the
current structural primary balance. In the long term, Germany appears to face medium fiscal sustainability risks, primarily related to the
projected ageing costs contributing with 2.5 pp. of GDP over the very long run,
in particular due to the pension and health components. The long-term
sustainability gap,[20]
showing the adjustment effort needed to ensure that the debt-to-GDP ratio is
not on an ever-increasing path, is at 2.1 % of GDP. Risks would be higher
in the event of the structural primary balance reverting to lower values
observed in the past, such as the average for the period 2004-2013. It is
therefore appropriate for Germany to continue to implement measures that reduce
government debt and further contain age-related expenditure growth to
contribute to the sustainability of public finances in the medium and long
term. Germany has
made limited progress as regards the 2013 country-specific recommendation to
enhance the cost-effectiveness of public spending on healthcare and long-term
care. At
8.4 % of GDP in 2011,[21]
the rate of public spending on healthcare in Germany is one of the highest in
the EU and is likely to increase further due to demographic change and
innovations in medical technology. In February 2014, a law was adopted that
extends the price moratorium for pharmaceuticals to the end of 2017 and
increases the standard manufacturer discount on patented medicines from 6 % to
7 %, following higher discounts of 16 % that were applied temporarily
between 2010 and 2013. On the other hand, on the grounds of methodological and
administrative problems, it abolishes the obligation to assess the added value
of pharmaceuticals as the basis for price‑setting for products already marketed
before 2011. Moreover, a draft law would reduce the contribution rate for
employees from 8.2 % currently to 7.3 % as of January 2015, the same rate that
applies to employers. To cover future cost increases, individual health
insurers would be allowed to raise extra, income-based contributions from
employees. The NRP announces further initiatives to be adopted over the
legislative period, including a prevention law, a number of measures aimed at enhancing
the quality of inpatient and outpatient care, and more freedom of contract
between health insurances and care providers. As for long-term care, the plans
are to make care professions more attractive and to implement the new
definition of care dependency (Pflegebedürftigkeitsbegriff), which will
lead to an extension of care services and eligibility. To this end, the
coalition agreement of the new government includes plans to increase the
contribution rate for long-term care by 0.5 pp in total over the
legislative term. The
recently adopted pension reform puts an additional strain on the sustainability
of the pension system and affects intergenerational income distribution. The reform,
aimed at improving pension benefits and early retirement conditions for certain
groups, includes: (i) a pension supplement for those having raised children
born before 1992 (Mütterrente); this already exists for those having
raised children born after 1992; (ii) the possibility of retirement without
pension reductions two years ahead of the statutory retirement age if
contributions have been paid for 45 years, including periods of unemployment (Rente
mit 63);[22]
(iii) improved pension entitlements for people with reduced earning capacity
for health reasons (Erwerbsminderungsrente); and (iv) an increased
budget for rehabilitation and integration measures in view of demographic
change. The underlying draft law estimated additional annual expenditure of EUR
4.4 billion in 2014 and EUR 9 billion in 2015, which would gradually
increase to EUR 11 billion in 2030, with the bulk to be spent on Mütterrente
and Rente mit 63.[23]
The plan is to finance this mainly through a higher pension contribution rate
for the active labour force, including low-wage earners, and a lower average
replacement rate,[24]
supplemented by transfers from the federal budget of around
EUR 2 billion annually as of 2019. This may have potentially negative
implications for employment and incomes, hence for the acquisition of future
pension entitlements under both the statutory pension insurance and
occupational and third pillar schemes. The reform will also reinforce the
downward trend in the average replacement rate, which is already projected to
be among the lowest in the OECD for future retirees.[25] Tax system Germany has
made overall limited progress as regards the 2013 country-specific
recommendation to improve the efficiency of the tax system and to reduce the
high tax burden on labour. It was recommended that the tax system
be made more efficient, in particular by broadening the VAT base and
reassessing the municipal real‑estate tax base, that high taxes and social
security contributions be reduced, especially for low-wage earners, and that
disincentives for second earners be removed. No
progress has been made in improving the efficiency and growth-friendliness of
the tax system in line with the AGS priorities. The NRP does
not contain major measures to shift towards more growth-friendly revenue
sources and reduce the strong reliance on labour taxation (22.1 % of GDP in
2012 vs. 20.0 % in the EU-28),[26]
which also involves a shrinking revenue base in view of the projected
demographic trends. The application of the reduced value-added tax (VAT) rate
(currently 7 %) could be narrowed. Rather low revenues from recurrent property
taxes (0.5 % of GDP in 2012 vs. 1.5 % in the EU-28) could be increased and the
distribution of the tax burden made fairer by reassessing the tax base for the
municipal real‑estate tax (Grundsteuer)[27]
and taking into account property location as well as size. The NRP confirms the
need to reform the Grundsteuer, though it does not specify possible
measures. There is also still scope for reducing inefficient tax expenditures,
especially those with environmentally harmful effects, such as energy tax reductions
and exemptions, the favourable taxation of company cars or the commuter income
tax deduction. Limited
efforts have been made to reduce the high taxes and social security
contributions for low-wage earners, and no measures have been taken to phase
out disincentives for second earners. The increase in
the basic income tax allowance in two steps in 2013 and 2014 slightly reduced
the tax burden on labour and curbed the impact of fiscal drag only partially in
the absence of a regular adjustment of the personal income‑tax brackets to
inflation, as applied in many other Member States. The tax wedge for low-wage
earners remains among the highest in the EU.[28]
Moreover, no measures have been taken to reduce fiscal disincentives for second
earners. Together with the still insufficient availability of full-time
childcare facilities and all-day schools (see Section 3.3), the joint taxation
of income for married couples (Ehegattensplitting) and free
health-insurance coverage for non-working spouses discourage women in
particular from increasing the number of hours they work. This is reflected in
a low proportion of women working full-time and one of the lowest numbers of
hours worked on average by women in the EU, despite a relatively high female
employment rate. Further promoting the option of shifting the allocation of the
basic income‑tax allowance between spouses (Faktorverfahren), as
provided for in the NRP, is likely to have only a limited impact, since the
annual tax burden remains unchanged. Also the exemption of mini-jobs from
personal income tax and in many cases from all employee social contributions
discourages workers from moving into jobs with earnings above the mini-job
threshold of EUR 450 per month (see Section 3.3). This disincentive is in
many cases even stronger for spouses subject to joint income taxation.[29] Overall,
the recent pension reform and other current reform plans are likely to involve
a rise in social insurance contribution rates and again to increase the tax
wedge.
Additional benefits and early retirement options for certain groups of
pensioners financed through statutory pension insurance, as recently adopted by
the new federal government, meant that the contribution rate was not reduced
from 18.9 % to 18.3 % by the beginning of 2014, as initially planned, and is
projected to further increase to the legal ceiling of 22 % in 2030. The planned
reduction in the healthcare contribution rate for employees would have a
positive impact in the short term. However, future cost increases in healthcare
could again put pressure on the tax wedge, in particular for low-wage earners,
as it is now planned that they will be covered by income-based contributions
from employees rather than flat-rate contributions combined with compensation
for low-income earners through the tax system, as provided for under the 2011
health reform. The planned increase in the contribution rate for long-term care
to finance an extension of care services will also add to the tax wedge. Conditions
for investment in Germany could be further improved by reducing the corporate
tax bias in favour of debt financing, reforming the local trade tax (Gewerbesteuer)
and cutting administrative burden. Despite the ʻinterest barrierʼ (Zinsschranke)
introduced under the 2008 corporate tax reform to limit the deductibility of
net interest expenses on all kinds of debt financing, a corporate tax bias
towards debt financing remains. Against the background of persistently high
non-financial corporate savings, it would also be useful to review how the tax
system affects firms’ decisions as to whether to retain earnings or pay out
dividends. Inefficiencies arise from the Gewerbesteuer due to the
inclusion of non-profit elements in the tax base. Moreover, a relatively high
administrative burden associated with the tax system may discourage investment
(see Section 3.5).
3.2.
Financial sector
Although
the German financial sector has undergone significant adjustment following the
crisis and has become more resilient, ensuring sufficient loss absorption
capacity and further consolidation in the banking sector remains a challenge. As
in the euro area at large, German banks reduced their risk-weighted assets and
strengthened their capital position. Between the end of 2008 and June 2013,
German banks’ ʻAs i tier 1 capitalʼ increased from 9.6 % to 15.3 % of
risk-weighted assets and is clearly above the euro-area average (12.6 %).[30] The
loan-to-deposit ratio (82.3 %) is below the euro-area average (99.0 %), while a
low ratio of non-performing loans (1.9 %) indicates solid bank assets. The
level of private‑sector indebtedness (101.2 % of GDP) is below the euro-area
average (124.5 %) and appears moderate. New legal provisions have entered into
force transposing EU capital and corporate governance requirements, separating
commercial banking from risky businesses, facilitating liquidation of financial
institutions and introducing criminal law rules for violations of risk
management duties. Nevertheless, as pointed out in the in-depth review,
it remains important to ensure sufficient loss absorption capacity in the
banking sector and full implementation of the new capital requirements.
Moreover, there appear still to be impediments to market-driven consolidation
in the banking sector. Low interest rates may pose a challenge for
institutional investors, notably insurance companies, and could also entail a
risk for housing markets. Germany has
made limited progress as regards the 2013 country-specific recommendation to
pursue efforts for consolidation in the banking sector, including by improving
the governance framework. In recent years Commission state‑aid
decisions, rather than market forces, have driven the restructuring (including
individual mergers) of the Landesbanken. Corporate governance
improvements also have taken place in a number of Landesbanken, subject
to state‑aid decisions. However, the overall structure of the Landesbanken
sector remains fragmented. Further steps to amend these banks’ corporate
structure and reduce political influence appear required to facilitate
market-driven consolidation. Reviewing the legal framework of the savings banks
could also contribute to removing possible impediments to consolidation in the
public banking sector and to a clearer separation of public interest objectives
and operational bank business, while safeguarding the savings banks’ business
model, which has proven to be so stable during the crisis. Lending
conditions remain very favourable for both corporates and households, but there
appears to be scope for improving access to venture capital in line with the
AGS priorities. While banks may be cautious in view of the ECB’s
Comprehensive Assessment, businesses (including small and medium‑sized enterprises
(SMEs)) still have very good access to finance and there are no indications of
a significant tightening of lending conditions,[31]
although access to venture capital still remains underdeveloped (see Section
3.4). Lending conditions also remain very favourable for private households,
and credit standards for both housing loans and consumer credits have hardly
changed recently. Non-financial corporates, especially large ones, have asked
for fewer loans and are increasingly having recourse to capital markets without
bank intermediation, while SMEs remain largely dependent on the banking sector.
Private household demand for housing loans and consumer credit stagnated in the
second half of 2013, ending a steady rise in demand for housing loans since the
second quarter of 2010. The
German housing market has gained momentum in recent years, but risks for
financial stability appear still to be limited. House prices
have been rising since 2009, especially in urban centres, on the back of
favourable income prospects, low interest rates and a flight of investment into
safe assets. Households’ robust balance sheets, the moderate growth in mortgage
lending, the favourable labour market and cautious lending standards limit the
risks to financial stability. However, sustained low interest rates and high
liquidity call for close monitoring of housing market developments. There
appears to be limited over‑valuation of house prices in urban areas, which is a
sign of high housing demand. Policy initiatives, such as the proposed cap on
rent increases for new contracts (Mietpreisbremse), aim at protecting
tenants against strong price hikes in tight housing markets. Such measures
should be designed so as to ensure that housing investment is not discouraged,
as it is indispensable for matching demand and supply on the housing market.
3.3.
Labour market[32], education and social policies
Despite the
overall favourable situation of the German labour market, increasing labour
supply and enhancing human capital remains a challenge in view of demographic
change and emerging skills shortages. The projected significant
decline in the workforce due to demographic change is expected to affect Germany’s potential growth and skills shortages are emerging in certain sectors and regions.
Germany is trying to attract skilled workers from abroad, but there is also
scope for activating the untapped labour and skills potential of the domestic
labour pool. The Europe 2020 target of a 77 % employment rate was achieved in
2013 (77.1 %). The unemployment rate is low overall (5.3 % in 2013), but it
exceeds 12 % in several Länder and long-term unemployment remains a
concern. There are wide gender gaps in terms of full-time labour market participation,
pay and pension entitlements. Intergenerational social mobility and Germany’s performance as regards at-risk‑of‑poverty indicators and income inequality is
average. Germany has
made overall limited progress as regards the 2013 country-specific recommendation
aimed at supporting incentives to work and the employability of workers, also
with a view to supporting domestic demand. The country-specific
recommendation concerned wages, the tax wedge on labour (especially for low-wage
earners), the educational achievement of disadvantaged people, activation and
integration measures (especially for the long-term unemployed), the transition
from non-regular employment such as mini-jobs into other forms of employment,
and incentives to work for second earners. Labour market and social policies Wages
continue to increase, thus supporting consumption and domestic demand, but
progress as regards the recommendation to reduce the high tax wedge, notably
for low‑wage earners, has been limited (see Section
3.1). Wages have risen in recent years following a prolonged period of wage
moderation, as described in the in-depth review for Germany. In 2013, real wage
growth was more moderate than in 2012, but real wages are expected to accelerate
in the coming years and to outstrip productivity, owing to a relatively tight
labour market and to forthcoming reforms (see below). Real wages and unit
labour costs are projected to grow faster in Germany than on average in the euro‑area
The federal government has adopted a
draft law aimed to introduce a general minimum wage at EUR 8.50 an hour
and to increase the coverage of collective bargaining agreements. Some
groups would be excluded from the minimum wage, notably under‑18‑year‑olds who
have not completed their professional training, apprentices and, in the first six
months of employment, the previously long‑term unemployed. The minimum wage
would be introduced as of 2015, becoming applicable in all sectors in 2017.
Thereafter, the level of the minimum wage would be adjusted by a committee of
social partners’ representatives. The draft law also provides for an easing of the
conditions for applying collective bargaining agreements, which cover wages, working
time and other working conditions, to all companies in a sector.[33] The minimum wage could have a positive
impact on wages, but close monitoring of potential employment effects is called
for. In
some segments of the labour market where employees’ power to negotiate wages is
comparatively weak, for instance due to lack of effective organisation or
representation, a minimum wage could have a positive impact on wages at the low
end of the distribution without significantly affecting employment. It could
also reduce the need for low-wage earners to supplement their income with means‑tested
social benefits (Aufstockung) and contribute to raising domestic demand thanks
to higher propensity to consume among low-income groups. But negative employment
effects may arise where cost increases due to higher wages cannot be passed on
to consumers, or via reduced demand if they are passed on through higher
prices. The
minimum wage is expected to affect a large number of workers in particular among
women, in the eastern Länder, in small companies, in mini-jobs and in
some service sectors, where a large proportion of workers earn less than EUR 8.50
an hour.[34] Moreover,
the predetermined level of EUR 8.50 an hour appears rather high in
international comparison, as measured by estimates of the effective minimum
wage or the proportion of workers for whom the minimum wage is expected to be
binding.[35] Therefore,
when adjusting the level of the minimum wage, it is important that the
committee of social partners’ representatives takes into account the potential impact
on employment. The interaction with the tax and
benefits system and price effects could reduce the effectiveness of the minimum
wage in supporting disposable income and domestic demand. The
impact on real disposable incomes would be lower than the direct impact on
gross wages, as the rise in wages would be partly compensated by higher taxes
and lower benefits, including in some cases the withdrawal of income top-ups (Aufstockung).
This, together with higher prices, would also tend to reduce the impact on
domestic demand. By the same token, while the minimum wage could reduce wage
disparities, the impact on net household income inequality and poverty may be less
than expected.[36] Despite
some progress towards appropriate activation and integration measures, long‑term
unemployment remains a concern. The proportion of total
unemployment accounted for by long-term unemployment (45.9 % in 2013) remains
higher than in other Member States with low unemployment rates, such as Sweden, Finland, Austria or Denmark. The integration of the long-term unemployed into the labour
market is difficult, as many have no vocational training or are aged 50 plus. The
federal government plans to increase the resources allocated for the
integration of jobseekers into the labour market (see Box 1). The NRP refers to
several measures, including a European Social Fund programme aimed to integrate
30 000 long-term unemployed into the labour market and some measures targeted
towards young people, but further efforts may be required. In particular, it is
important to assess how effective the 2011 reform of active labour market
instruments has been in fostering the integration of the remaining long-term
unemployed. Limited
progress has been made in taking measures to facilitate the transition from non‑regular
employment such as mini-jobs into more sustainable forms of employment. For certain
groups (e.g. students, pensioners), mini-jobs are a source of additional
income.[37]
However, for many, the fiscal treatment of mini-jobs (see Section 3.1) provides
a strong incentive to work only in such jobs. The favourable fiscal conditions
of mini-jobs may also create distortions by discouraging companies from opting
for other types of contract. The NRP announces measures to facilitate the
transition from mini-jobs into regular employment, better inform mini-job
workers about their rights, a maximum duration for temporary contracts, equal
payment for temporary workers and the right to return to full-time work after a
temporary shift to part-time work. These plans are, however, not further
specified. Moreover, the introduction of
clear criteria to determine the ‘abusiveness’ of service contracts (Werkverträge),
as announced in the coalition agreement of the new federal
government, would be welcome. Long-term risks of increasing old-age
poverty suggest additional efforts to address the root causes of low pensions
and to ensure a higher take-up of occupational and private pension insurance by
low-wage earners. While
old-age poverty is currently not particularly pronounced in Germany, there are risks of an increase in the coming decades,
notably due to the expansion of the low‑wage sector.[38] A minimum income for retirees is currently ensured by means‑tested
benefits (Grundsicherung), which have been taken up increasingly since
their introduction in 2003.[39] The NRP
includes plans to top up low pensions as from 2017 (Lebensleistungsrente). According to the
coalition agreement of the new federal government, these plans would be
financed by the federal budget, including funds saved by reduced expenditure on
the targeted means-tested benefits. However, topping up low pensions would not
address the root causes of low pensions: usually
fragmented employment biographies and low incomes due to disincentives to work, in particular for women, or insufficient educational
achievement. Moreover, while the plan, at a later
stage, is to make the new benefits conditional on taking out additional private
pension insurance, this may not be sufficient to increase the low take-up of
second- and third-pillar pension schemes by low‑wage earners.[40] Neither would the
plans address the risks of old-age
poverty among the self‑employed.[41] Education Germany
has made some progress in improving the availability of full‑time early
childhood education and care places in line with last year’s recommendation,
but there appears to be scope for improving the contribution of all-day schools
to high‑quality
education. The legal enrolment right for one‑to‑three year‑olds as of
August 2013 sped up the expansion of childhood education and care places, but
bottlenecks persist, notably in some regions and urban areas. With 29.3 % of
children under three in formal childcare facilities,[42] Germany has not reached the Barcelona and national targets (33 % and 39 % respectively). Children
with a migrant background tend to participate less in early childhood education
and care than others. While the quantity of childcare facilities has grown
rapidly, their quality should also improve, for instance by increasing the
allocation of staff per child, staff qualifications[43] and
opening hours of the facilities. The NRP includes plans
for additional funds for investment in childcare (see Section 3.1) and some
specific projects aimed to improve the quality of childcare. The
proportion of pupils in all-day primary schools increased in recent years from
very modest levels, but penetration rates vary across regions.[44]
While the NRP refers to Länder efforts to improve the provision of
all-day schools, the schools differ widely as regards their organisation and
the type of activity offered, with a high proportion providing care rather than
schooling, suggesting that their potential contribution to high‑quality
education could improve. Germany
has made some progress in raising the educational achievement of disadvantaged
people, but the link between educational achievement and socio-economic
background remains strong. Social disadvantage in education has
decreased in the last decade but remains significant, in particular for
migrants. Competences among the young have improved in recent years, but there
are significant differences among Länder[45] and
the rate of early school leaving also varies widely across regions and is
higher for people with disabilities.[46] The
federal government and in particular the Länder are making efforts to
tackle educational disadvantage according to the NRP. For instance, the Search
for later starters (Spätstarter gesucht) programme is aimed at helping
young unemployed without vocational training to obtain a degree. The Education
through language and writing (Bildung durch Sprache und Schrift) initiative
helps children to progress more effectively in improving their linguistic and
reading competences throughout their formal education. Box 2:
Potential impact of structural reforms on growth –a benchmarking exercise Structural
reforms are crucial for boosting growth. It is therefore
important to know the potential benefits of these reforms. Benefits of
structural reforms can be assessed with the help of economic models. The
Commission uses its QUEST model to determine how structural reforms in a given Member State would affect growth if the Member State narrowed its gap
vis‑à‑vis the average of the three best EU performers on key indicators,
such as labour market participation. Improving on these indicators could raise Germany's GDP by about 2½ % over a 10-year period. Some reforms could have an effect
even within a relatively short time horizon. The largest gains would likely
stem from further increasing women’s and older workers’ participation, and
shifting the tax burden towards consumption. The model simulations corroborate
the analysis of Section 3 showing that there is scope for activating the
untapped labour and skills potential of several groups, inter alia by
reducing the tax burden on labour, improving the educational achievement of
disadvantaged people or maintaining appropriate activation and integration
measures, especially for the long-term unemployed. Reforms would have a greater
impact on GDP in the long run. This is in particular the case for measures to enhance
skills (see note) or reduce markups in final goods markets. Table:
Structural indicators, targets and potential GDP effects[47] Source:
Commission services. Note: Simulations assume that all Member States undertake
reforms which close their structural gaps by half. The table shows the
contribution of each reform to total GDP after five and ten years. If the
country is above the benchmark for a given indicator, we do not simulate the
impact of reform measures in that area; however, the Member State in question can still benefit from measures taken by other Member States.[48] *
The long-run effect of increasing the share of high-skilled population would be
1.1% of GDP and of decreasing the share of low-skilled would be 1.6%. ** EU
average is set as the benchmark.
3.4.
Structural measures
promoting sustainable growth and competitiveness
The
far reaching transformation of Germany’s energy system (Energiewende)
and persisting barriers to competition in some sectors remain a challenge. The Energiewende
involves potentially high economic costs accentuated by inefficiencies in
energy policy instruments, the possibility of capacity constraints caused by
delays in the deployment of the energy infrastructure, and the need for
enhanced coordination with neighbouring countries to avoid negative spillover
effects. Moreover, while productivity growth may be structurally lower in the
service sectors than in industry, in some (notably professional services[49]) it
is particularly low. Competition in the railway markets remains weak, and
bottlenecks for start‑up companies are hindering the development of high-tech
sectors. Measures aimed at raising productivity in these sectors would
contribute to boosting domestic sources of growth. In 2013, Germany received country-specific recommendations calling for reforms in the energy,
railway and service sectors and in public procurement. Germany has
made some progress as regards the recommendations to keep the overall costs of
transforming the energy system to a minimum and to improve the coordination of
the energy policy with neighbouring countries. Progress has been overall limited
as regards the recommendations to increase competition in the services and
railway sectors and to increase the value of public contracts open to
procurement. The
revised Act against Competition Restrictions came into force in 2013. Energy The
current renewable energy support system has been successful in promoting the
development of renewables, but this has been achieved at high cost. Despite
measures taken in the past, the surcharge paid by electricity consumers to
provide incentives for renewable energy production has increased by 18 % in
2014 as compared with 2013, on top of an increase of 47 % in 2013, and amounted
to EUR 19.4 billion or 0.7 % of GDP in 2013. The level of support has not always
been adjusted downwards quickly enough, leading to over‑compensation in some
cases and increasing the costs for those electricity consumers not benefiting
from reduced surcharges. Also, the roll-out of renewable energy with close‑to‑zero
marginal generation costs has contributed to reducing wholesale prices, thereby
raising the surcharge and decreasing the profitability of existing conventional
power plants. While the feed-in tariff system has been successful in increasing
the share of renewables, it has been less suitable for promoting the market
integration of renewables, as producers are not exposed to market price signals. The
government has adopted a proposal for a revision of the Renewable Energy Act aimed
to improve the cost-effectiveness of the support system. The draft
law involves introducing mandatory direct marketing of renewable electricity, except
for small producers, moving from feed-in tariffs to floating market premiums which
provide a limited market exposure. In order to allow for better coordination with
network expansion and avoid over-compensation, the proposal defines technology-specific
corridors limiting the expansion of renewables and includes plans for moving, by
2017, to a tendering system to determine the support level. The feed-in-tariffs
for renewable capacity will be reduced. The federal government has also adopted
a draft law reviewing the criteria for granting exemptions to energy‑intensive
industries in view of the Commission’s ongoing in-depth investigation of the compatibility
of the exemptions with European state‑aid rules and the recently adopted
Guidelines on State aid for environmental protection and energy 2014-2020.[50] If
implemented in a timely and comprehensive manner, these proposals would
contribute to more cost-effective support for renewable energies. In this
regard, it is important to monitor their impact, ensure the cost-effective
deployment of less‑developed technologies, and take due account of cross-border
effects in order to limit internal market distortions. Plans in the coalition
agreement of the new federal government to develop a capacity mechanism in the
medium term could result in higher costs and further internal market
distortions, and thus requires a careful assessment and coordination with
neighbouring countries. Successful
implementation of the Energiewende also requires further action as regards
network expansion and coordination with neighbouring countries. Germany
has made some progress in accelerating network expansion since last year’s
recommendation by implementing the Federal Requirements Plan (Bundesbedarfsplan)
prioritising projects which will benefit from an accelerated approval procedure
and granting the federal regulator new competences in planning and approval
procedures. However, network expansion is still lagging behind and significant further
efforts, including addressing public resistance, are needed on both
intra-German infrastructure and cross‑border interconnections to better coordinate
renewables expansion with grid development and avoid unscheduled flows towards the
networks of neighbouring countries. Ongoing efforts to jointly manage
unscheduled flows through the installation and operation of phase shift
transformers at the Czech and Polish borders are welcome, but the physical
interconnection capacity needs to be expanded, further than planned so far, to
allow for commercial flows. In particular, it is important to implement the
projects of common interest, namely the interconnections between Germany and Poland, and to assess additional interconnection needs with the Czech Republic. As regards the gas network, further enhancements are necessary to improve
interconnectivity with neighbouring countries, including reverse flows, and new
transport capacity. Increasing
energy efficiency is also important to reduce the overall costs of transforming
the energy system. A timely and comprehensive
implementation of the Energy Efficiency Directive is therefore important, but the
measures notified so far by Germany fall short of the cumulative end-use energy
saving target. Residential building is the sector with the highest energy‑saving
potential. In 2013, legislation was adopted that established ambitious minimum
efficiency levels for new buildings and the coalition agreement of the new federal
government contained plans to continue providing refurbishment and ecological
reconstruction loans, which have been effective in the past. Additional
measures could be considered to address the existing building stock. An adequate
regulatory framework and economic incentives where appropriate remain important
if energy savings targets beyond 2020 are to be achieved. Transport Germany has
not taken significant steps to improve competition in the railway markets. The Bundesrat
rejected a draft law aimed at streamlining the principles of network access,
easing market access for railway undertakings and granting greater powers to
the regulator (Eisenbahnregulierungsgesetz). The Commission considers
that Germany does not comply with EU rules on financial transparency in the
rail sector and has taken Germany to the European Court of Justice. Germany is the only Member State with a system of agreements on the transfer of profits from the
infrastructure subsidiaries to the holding. Under the current arrangements,
public funds may be used to cross‑subsidise passenger and freight train
services open to competition, even in other Member States. According to the
NRP, the government intends to transpose Directive 2012/34/EU (Recast of the
First Railway Package) into national law. In the stability programme, the
federal government has confirmed plans to extend the use of road charging,
where the net revenues would be earmarked for investment in transport
infrastructure. If properly designed and in line with the EU principles of non‑discrimination
and proportionality, such a pricing instrument could contribute to a more
efficient use of the road infrastructure in Germany. Internal
market, liberalisation and competition Policy
action has been limited as regards restrictions preventing companies and
individual professionals from entering the services markets and exercising
their professions. There are still barriers to entering the
market and exercising professional services; these include restrictions on
legal form and shareholding, and professional qualification requirements.[51] In
several craft sectors, there is a requirement to hold a master craftsman’s
certificate (Meisterbrief) or equivalent qualification in order to run a
craft business. This may limit competition without always being justified by
public interests and affect the professionals’ mobility in the EU. It is
important to assess the overall impact of the 2004 reform, which lifted this
requirement for a number of crafts, including the effects on vocational
training and competition. While Germany has undertaken isolated reforms in
specific professions and regions, for instance as regards authorisations and
commercial communication in the construction sector, the overall situation in
the service sector has not changed significantly since last year. Germany has not launched any broader review of its services regulation to determine whether
legitimate public‑interest objectives such as consumer protection and public
safety could be achieved with lighter regulation. Germany is, however,
participating in the ongoing mutual evaluation exercise of regulated professions
at European level, which provides an opportunity for such a review. The
diversity of regulatory arrangements across Länder also suggests that
there is scope for identifying the least burdensome regulatory approaches and
extending them throughout the country. The postal services market continues to
be dominated by the partially state-owned incumbent operator and a review of
the regulatory framework, inter alia to give the national regulator
additional powers over price and access control, has been further delayed. The
value of contracts published by the German authorities under EU procurement
legislation remains low despite ongoing efforts. Germany has one of the lowest values of contracts published under EU procurement
legislation (1.1 % of GDP or 5.7 % of public expenditure on works, goods and
services, as compared with 3.4 % or 17.7 % on average in the EU-27 respectively).[52] This
may hinder cost reductions and affect German and European businesses in terms
of foregone business opportunities. In response to the country-specific
recommendation issued in 2013, the federal government initiated a review of its
guidance and, in cooperation with the Länder, an assessment of the
reasons behind its low publication rate as well as an exchange of best
practices. The NRP announces the development of a nationwide database to
collect statistical data on procurement procedures. These are steps in the
right direction, but further efforts are needed to identify the reasons behind
the low publication rate and to open public procurement to EU-wide bidding.
While the availability of e‑procurement systems throughout Germany is relatively good, the electronic market is highly fragmented, making it difficult
for economic operators to participate in public procurement procedures. A
comprehensive strategy to foster the transition to a transparent e‑procurement
market, making full use of available technological solutions to foster
interoperability, could increase competition among tenderers and ultimately
reduce costs. Despite
the overall good performance of the retail sector, planning regulations in
certain Länder continue to restrict market entry for large retail outlets. The usage
of economic criteria sometimes applied in the authorisation procedures to
assess the impact of large outlets on city and town centres may hamper market
entries and favour certain types of retailer. No measures have been taken to
address this issue and the NRP does not announce any measure. The 2013
amendments to the Federal Building Code, which were aimed at fostering the
further development of city centres, did not address it. The current EU peer
review on retail establishment provides an opportunity to identify best
practices that could guide future reforms in Germany. There
is scope for taking greater advantage of the growth potential of information
and communication technologies. Although Germany is one of the
leading countries in the EU as regards fourth‑generation (4G) mobile network
availability, it lags behind in the share of fixed very fast broadband lines
(next‑generation access, Fibre/LAN subscriptions), compared with other
economies such as South Korea or Japan.[53]
The NRP has announced, in the context of the Digital Agenda 2014-2017, further
development of the broadband strategy with a view to accelerating the expansion
of broadband lines. In this context, it will be important to ensure a
competitive and investment‑friendly environment and to incentivise broadband
roll‑out where necessary. Research
and innovation Germany
is one of the EU’s innovation leaders, but regional disparities are large. The
country is the second best performer in the EU according to the new European
Innovation Output Indicator.[54]
Germany is close to achieving its R&D expenditure target of 3 % of GDP,
but other leading innovative economies are investing even more (see Section
3.1). Significant disparities exist in innovation performance and expenditure
at regional level, especially as regards private investment in R&D, with
the eastern Länder in general lagging behind. Regional clusters aiming
at smart specialisation to address disparities in R&D intensity lead in the
right direction. The planned extension of the High‑Tech Strategy could support
innovation in future markets. Lack
of finance and skills shortages are hindering the growth of start-up companies,
including in high-tech sectors. The federal government supports
fast-growing, innovative start-up companies through financing instruments such
as investment grants and micro mezzanine funds. As signalled in the NRP, it
intends to improve the regulatory framework and review the legal and tax rules
for venture capital in order to improve international competitiveness. This
would be a welcome step and could contribute to stimulating private investment
and entrepreneurship. Adapting the education and training system to the
changing requirements of technology and innovation, and raising labour supply
of skilled labour, will be crucial to avoiding shortages of qualified staff in
high‑tech industries. Germany is taking initiatives aimed at attracting and
retaining students and academics from abroad, but more efforts are needed,
including to encourage talented women in science and technology and to curb the
increasing relocation of leading researchers abroad.[55]
3.5.
Modernisation of public administration
The
business environment is generally favourable, but there is still room for
improvement in certain areas. Despite efforts to further reduce
the administrative burden, estimated compliance costs increased by EUR 1.5
billion between July 2012 and June 2013, on top of a EUR 0.7 billion increase
the year before.[56]
Not all measures agreed in December 2011 by the federal government have been
implemented. In line with the AGS priorities, defining a new target for
additional simplification measures could help stimulate this process. There may
be room for further improvement with respect to the time and cost of starting a
business and obtaining the necessary licences. Although the
2011 Tax Simplification Act brought about some improvement and the new federal
government plans measures to increase the current low rates of electronic tax
filing and pre-filling of tax returns,[57]
SMEs in particular would benefit from further simplification of the tax system
and reforms of tax administration, including better coordination across Länder.[58] Although
public administration in Germany is generally efficient, the availability of
online public services remains below the EU average. This
could burden SMEs and put a brake on business formation, especially with regard
to start-ups which cannot afford high compliance costs. Initiatives such as the
E-Government Act lead in the right direction. The ‘points of single contact’
system does not exploit possible synergies with existing e‑government
solutions, and differences persist in terms of availability of information, the
possibility of completing procedures online and functionality. This affects
service providers, including those from other Member States. It is important
that the federal government works with the Länder to ensure high
standards so that service providers can benefit from the simplified
administrative environment across Germany. The use of e-signatures could also
be improved. Box 3. Conclusions
from the March 2014 in-depth review on Germany The first in-depth review
on Germany under the Macroeconomic Imbalances Procedure was published on 5
March 2014.[59] On the basis of this review, the
Commission concluded that Germany is experiencing macroeconomic imbalances,
which require monitoring and policy action. The in-depth
review highlights that the economy has recorded a large
current‑account surplus of about 6-7 % of GDP since 2007, which is not
projected to fall below 6 % over the coming years. A current‑account surplus is
in line with the structural characteristics of the German economy. However, the
pace at which it has been accumulated and its persistence even during a time of
adjustment within the euro area cannot be fully explained by factors that
usually drive the current account. The surplus is the result
of an interplay of various factors and developments in Germany as well as globally and among its euro‑area partners, which affected saving and
investment in the domestic economy. Over the course
of a decade, these factors caused household savings to increase and have tamed
consumption growth, while at the same time denting business investment and
driving up firms’ net savings. The expansion of Germany’s current‑account
surplus can thus predominantly be traced back to the private sector. In the public
sector, a persistently low and declining level of investment stands out. The
result has been muted domestic demand and a weaker growth performance than
could have been attained with a more balanced growth pattern. The in-depth review
therefore suggests that a key challenge is to identify and implement measures
that help strengthen domestic demand and the economy’s growth potential. This would involve additional measures to reduce the backlog in
public investment, while keeping up efforts to support human capital formation
and safeguard innovation potential in the economy. Further steps to improve the
business environment and more efficient corporate taxation would support private
investment. Steps to further reduce disincentives to work could support labour
supply and raise workers’ income. Mapping out initiatives to ensure investment
and productivity growth in the service sector should also yield potential
gains.
4.
Conclusions
Domestic demand amid
sound fundamentals remains the driver of the solid expansion of the German
economy. Notably, favourable financing conditions
and dissipating uncertainty support a gradual recovery in equipment investment,
while the robust labour market and low interest rates support private
consumption and housing investment. Amid continued robust employment growth and
despite increasing participation rates and still‑high net immigration,
unemployment is low and decreasing. Domestic price pressures remain in place alongside
increasing labour market tightness, while falling energy prices have dampened
headline inflation. The new federal government
is making a number of reforms, but overall Germany has made limited progress in
addressing last year's country‑specific recommendations. Germany has preserved a sound fiscal position, but has made limited
progress in enhancing the growth-friendliness of public expenditure and the tax
system. The recent pension reform is aimed at improving pensions and early retirement
conditions for certain groups, but puts an additional strain on the
sustainability of the pension system and leads to increased pension
contributions and thus potentially to a higher tax wedge for the active labour
force, including low-wage earners. Germany has made limited progress in
improving incentives to work and the employability of workers. The government
plans to introduce a general minimum wage of EUR 8.50 an hour, which could
have a positive impact on wages at the low end of the distribution, and to
increase the coverage of collective bargaining agreements. However, potential employment
effects, together with the interaction with taxation and benefits and
potentially higher prices, could reduce the impact of the minimum wage in terms
of supporting disposable income and domestic demand, especially over time. The
federal government has adopted a proposal for a revision of the Renewable
Energy Act. If implemented in a timely and comprehensive manner, this would contribute
to increase the cost-effectiveness of the support for renewable energies. The
government has not taken significant measures to increase competition in the
service and railway sectors. Despite
the current overall favourable economic situation, challenges identified in
July 2013 and reiterated in the Annual Growth Survey remain. In
particular, the projected significant decline in the workforce due to
demographic change is expected to affect potential growth. Moreover, the
potential risks associated with the far-reaching transformation of the energy
system could hinder the country’s economic performance going forward. There are
still inefficiencies in some spending policies and in the tax system. Barriers
to competition persist in some sectors. The recently
published in-depth review finds that Germany persistently
accumulates large current‑account surpluses as a result of an interplay of
various factors and developments in all economic sectors, as well as globally
and among its euro‑area partners, which affect saving and investment in the
domestic economy. The German economy would benefit from identifying and
implementing measures that help strengthen domestic demand and the economy's
growth potential. The
policy plans submitted by Germany in the national reform programme and the
stability programme aim to address the challenges identified in last year's staff
working document. Broad coherence between the national
reform programme and the stability programme has been ensured. The national
reform programme announces Germany's plans to address shortcomings in the areas
of labour market and education, energy, public procurement and the service,
railway and financial sectors. The stability programme confirms Germany's commitment to comply with the medium-term objective and ensure the long-run
sustainability of public finances in line with the Stability and Growth Pact. Overall,
however, planned measures do not address the challenges in a comprehensive way.
Overview table
2013 commitments || Summary assessment[60] Country-specific recommendations CSR 1: Preserve a sound fiscal position as envisaged which ensures compliance with the medium-term objective over the programme horizon. Pursue a growth‑friendly fiscal policy through additional efforts to enhance the cost-effectiveness of public spending on healthcare and long-term care through better integration of care delivery and a stronger focus on prevention and rehabilitation and independent living. Improve the efficiency of the tax system, in particular by broadening the VAT base and by reassessing the municipal real estate tax base; use the available scope for increased and more efficient growth-enhancing spending on education and research at all levels of government. Complete the implementation of the debt brake in a consistent manner across all Länder, ensuring that monitoring procedures and correction mechanisms are timely and relevant. || Germany has made some progress in addressing CSR 1: · The recommendation to preserve a sound fiscal position has been fully addressed. Germany recorded a balanced budget and a structural surplus in 2013. It plans continued compliance with the medium-term budgetary objective and to steadily bring down the debt-to-GDP ratio over the programme period. · Limited progress in enhancing the cost‑effectiveness of public spending on healthcare and long‑term care. Measures containing price increases for pharmaceuticals have been prolonged. New measures aimed at improving the quality and cost-effectiveness of healthcare have been announced but not yet specified. · No progress in improving the efficiency of the tax system. No major measures have been taken or announced to shift towards more growth-friendly revenue sources. · Limited progress in raising expenditure on education and some progress as regards more research spending. The federal government plans continued contributions to the financing of educational infrastructure, but the share of public spending on education in GDP remains below-average. In contrast, the share of public and private expenditure on R&D in GDP has increased in recent years. · Some progress in completing the ‘debt brake’. Two more Länder have amended their constitutions and two further Länder have laid down specific implementing rules. CSR 2: Sustain conditions that enable wage growth to support domestic demand. To this purpose, reduce high taxes and social security contributions, especially for low‑wage earners and raise the educational achievement of disadvantaged people. Maintain appropriate activation and integration measures, especially for the long-term unemployed. Facilitate the transition from non-standard employment such as mini-jobs into more sustainable forms of employment. Take measures to improve incentives to work and the employability of workers, in particular for second earners and the low-skilled, also with a view to improving their income. To this end, remove disincentives for second earners and further increase the availability of full‑time childcare facilities and all-day schools. || Germany has made limited progress in addressing CSR 2: · Some progress in sustaining conditions that enable wage growth to support domestic demand. Wages have increased in recent years and are expected to continue growing. · Limited progress in reducing the high tax wedge, especially for low-wage earners. The increase in the basic income tax allowance slightly reduced the tax burden on labour and curbed the impact of fiscal drag only partially. The recent pension reform leads to increased pension contributions and thus potentially to a higher tax wedge. · Some progress in raising the educational achievement of disadvantaged people. The NRP reports on efforts by the federal government and the Länder to tackle educational disadvantage. · Limited progress in maintaining appropriate activation and integration measures. Some measures are being taken, but Germany has not assessed the effectiveness of the 2011 reform of active labour instruments. · Limited progress in facilitating the transition from non-standard employment to more sustainable forms of employment. The NRP announces measures related to the maximum duration and payment of temporary work, the mini-jobs and the right to return from part-time to full-time work, but these measures are not further specified. · No progress in removing disincentives for second earners. The announced further promotion of the option of shifting the allocation of the basic income-tax allowance between spouses (Faktorverfahren) is likely to have only a limited impact, since the annual tax burden remains unchanged. · Some progress in further increasing the availability of full‑time childcare facilities. The quantity of childcare facilities has grown rapidly and additional funds for investment in childcare are planned. · Limited progress in increasing the availability of all-day schools. Despite Länder efforts to improve the provision of all-day schools, there appears to be scope for improvement. CSR 3: Improve the coordination of the energy policy with neighbouring countries and keep the overall costs of transforming the energy system to a minimum, in particular by further reviewing the cost-effectiveness of energy policy instruments designed to achieve the renewable energy targets and by continuing efforts to accelerate the expansion of the national and cross-border electricity and gas networks. || Some progress has been made in addressing CSR 3: · Some progress in improving the coordination of energy policy with neighbouring countries. Some measures are being taken to improve coordination with neighbouring countries, e.g. to jointly manage unscheduled flows at the Czech and Polish borders. · Some progress in reviewing the cost‑effectiveness of energy policy instruments designed to achieve the renewable energy targets. The federal government has adopted a proposal for a revision of the Renewable Energy Act that could contribute to increasing the cost‑effectiveness of the support for renewable energy. · Some progress in accelerating the expansion of the national and cross-border electricity and gas networks. The Federal Requirements Plan (Bundesbedarfsplan) has been implemented and the federal regulator has been granted new competences, but network expansion is still lagging behind. CSR 4: Take measures to further stimulate competition in the services sectors, including certain crafts — in the construction sector in particular — and professional services to boost domestic sources of growth. Take urgent action to significantly increase the value of public contracts open to procurement. Adopt and implement the announced legislative reform to improve the enforcement of competition law regarding competition restrictions. Remove planning restrictions which unduly restrict new entries in the retail sector. Take further measures to eliminate the remaining barriers to competition in the railway markets. Pursue efforts for consolidation in the banking sector, including by improving the governance framework. || Germany has made limited progress in addressing CSR 4: · Limited progress in taking measures to further stimulate competition in the service sector. Germany has undertaken isolated reforms in specific professions and regions. · Limited progress in increasing the value of public contracts open to procurement. Steps in the right direction, including the development of a database on procurement procedures. · Full implementation of improved enforcement of competition law as regards competition restrictions. The revised Act against Competition Restrictions came into force in 2013. · No progress in removing planning regulations that unduly restrict new entries in the retail sector. No measures have been taken. · Limited progress in taking further measures to eliminate the remaining barriers to competition in the railway markets. No significant steps to improve competition in the railway markets. The NRP announces the transposition of European legislation into national law. · Limited progress in pursuing efforts for consolidation in the banking sector, including by improving the governance framework. While Commission state-aid decisions have driven the restructuring of Landesbanken, no major measures have been taken to address possible impediments to market-driven consolidation in the public banking sector. Europe 2020 (national targets and progress) Policy field target || Progress achieved Employment rate target: 77 % of the population aged 20‑64 || Employment rate for population aged 20-64: 76.3 % in 2011, 76.7 % in 2012 and 77.1 % in 2013. Employment rate among women: 71.1 % in 2011, 71.5 % in 2012 and 72.3 % in 2013 (national target: 73 %). Employment rate for population aged 55-64: 59.9 % in 2011, 61.5 % in 2012 and 63.5 % in 2013 (national target: 60 %). The overall target was reached in 2013 and the trend for both subgroups is positive. R&D target: 3 % of GDP || Gross domestic expenditure on R&D increased from 2.51 % of GDP in 2005 to 2.89 % of GDP in 2011 and estimated 2.98 % of GDP in 2012. Germany clearly progressed in achieving the 3 % R&D target and by 2012 had almost reached it. Greenhouse gas emissions target: -14 % (as compared with 2005 emissions; ETS emissions are not covered by this national target) || Change in non-ETS greenhouse gas emissions between 2005 and 2012 (estimated): - 6.5 %. According to the latest national projections submitted to the Commission and taking into account existing measures, non-ETS emissions will be 13 % lower in 2020 than in 2005. Hence, it is expected that the target will be missed by a margin of less than one percentage point. Renewable energy target: 18 % Share of renewable energy in the transport sector: 10 % || Share of renewable energy in gross final energy consumption: 11.6 % in 2011 and 12.4 % in 2012 (6.1 % in transport for both 2011 and 2012). Progress towards both targets seems good for now. Indicative national energy efficiency target: annual improvement of energy intensity (energy productivity) by 2.1 % pa on average until 2020. The absolute level of energy consumption in 2020 was determined to be at 276.6 Mtoe (primary energy consumption) respectively 194.3 Mtoe (final energy consumption). || This target is less ambitious than that established in the national Energy Concept of September 2010 (primary energy consumption to decrease by 20 % and power consumption by 10 % as compared with 2008). Germany has notified the policy measures it plans to adopt to implement Article 7 of the Energy Efficiency Directive. Early school leaving target: < 10 % || Early leavers from education and training: 11.7 % of the population aged 18-24 in 2011, 10.6 % in 2012 and 9.9 % in 2013. Germany has already achieved the target. Male early school leaving (10.4 %) is still 1 % higher than female early school leaving, but the gap has narrowed by 0.2 %. Tertiary education target: 42 % of the population aged 30-34 || Tertiary education attainment: 30.7 % in 2011, 32 % in 2012 and 33.1 % in 2013 against EU average of 36.8 % (according to definition of headline target); 42.2 % in 2011 and 43.5 % in 2012 including ISCED 4 (according to definition of national target and the NRP). The growth path is expected to continue and might accelerate given the current enrolment numbers. Risk‑of‑poverty or social exclusion target: 20 % reduction in the number of long-term unemployed by 2020 as compared with 2008 (i.e. reduction by 320 000 long-term unemployed) || Reduction in the number of long-term unemployed: 484 000 in 2011, 607 000 in 2012 and 641 000 in 2013 as compared with 2008.[61] The number of long-term unemployed decreased by around 38 % between 2008 and 2013. Germany has already fulfilled the national Europe 2020 target.
Annex
Standard Tables Table
I. Macroeconomic indicators Table II. Comparison of
macroeconomic developments and forecasts Table III. Composition of the
budgetary adjustment Table IV. Debt dynamics Table V. Sustainability indicators Table VI. Taxation indicators Table VII. Financial market
indicators Table VIII. Labour market and
social indicators Table
IX. Product market performance and policy indicators Table X. Green Growth List of indicators used in Box 2 on the potential impact on growth of
structural reforms. Final goods sector mark-ups: Price-cost
margin, i.e. the difference between the selling price of a good or service and
its cost. Final goods mark-ups are proxied by the mark-ups in selected services
sectors (transport and storage, post and telecommunications, electricity, gas
and water supply, hotels and restaurants and financial intermediation but
excluding real estate and renting of machinery and equipment and other business
activities[62]).
Source: Commission services estimation
using the methodology of Roeger, W. (1995). "Can imperfect
Competition explain the Difference between primal and dual Productivity?" Journal
of Political Economy Vol. 103(2) pp. 316-30, based on
EUKLEMS 1996-2007 data. Entry costs: Cost of
starting a business in the intermediate sector as a share of income per capita.
The intermediate sector is proxied by the manufacturing sector in the model. Source: World Bank, Doing Business
Database. www.doingbusiness.org.
2012 data. Implicit consumption tax rate:
Defined as total taxes on consumption over the value of private consumption. In
the simulations it is used as a proxy for shifting taxation away from labour to
indirect taxes. The implicit consumption tax-rates are increased (halving the
gap vis-à-vis the best performers) while labour tax-rates are reduced so that
the combined impact is ex-ante budgetary neutral. Source: European Commission, Taxation
trends in the European Union, 2013 edition, Luxembourg, 2013. 2011 data. Shares of high-skilled and low-skilled: The
share of high skilled workers is increased, the share of low-skilled workers is
reduced (halving the gap vis-à-vis the best performers). Low-skilled correspond
to ISCED 0-2 categories; high-skilled correspond to scientists (in mathematics
and computing, engineering, manufacturing and construction). The remainder is
medium-skilled. Source: EUROSTAT. 2012 data or latest
available. Female non-participation rate: Share
of women of working age not in paid work and not looking for paid work in total
female working-age population Source: EUROSTAT. 2012 data or latest
available. Low-skilled male non-participation
rates: Share
of low-skilled men of working age not in paid work and not looking for paid
work in total male working-age population Source: EUROSTAT. 2012 data or latest
available. Elderly non-participation rates (55‑64
years): Share
of the population aged 55‑64 years not in paid work and not looking for paid
work in total population aged 55‑64 years. Source: EUROSTAT. 2012 data or latest
available. ALMP: Active Labour
Market Policy expenditures as a share of GDP over the share of unemployed in
the population. Source: EUROSTAT. 2011 data or latest
available. Benefit replacement rate: Share
of a worker's pre-unemployment income that is paid out by the unemployment
insurance scheme. Average of net replacement rates over 60 months of
unemployment. Source:
OECD, Benefits and Wages Statistics. www.oecd.org/els/benefitsandwagesstatistics.htm.
2012 data. [1] COM(2013) 800 final. [2] COM(2013) 790 final. [3] European Commission (2014), Macroeconomic imbalances — Germany
2014, European Economy, Occasional Papers, No 174. [4] Apart from the 16 Member States identified
in the AMR, Ireland was also covered by an in-depth review, following the
conclusion by the Council that it should be fully integrated into the normal
surveillance framework after the successful completion of its financial
assistance programme. [5] The
outlook underlying the NRP and the stability programme is based on the
government’s February 2014 Economic Projections. The authorities published an
updated forecast on 15th April, i.e. after the submission of the NRP
and the stability programme. [6] The updated draft budgetary plan for 2014, submitted on 8 April
2014, includes projections of the annual budgetary impact of the pension reform
and the other new expenditure measures rounded to half a percentage point of GDP.
According to these projections, the measures would have a largely neutral
impact on the budget balance in 2014 and a slightly expansionary effect of
about ½ % of GDP thereafter. [7] Cyclically adjusted balance net of one-off and temporary measures,
recalculated by the Commission on the basis of the information provided in the
programme, using the commonly agreed methodology. [8] Statistisches Bundesamt (2014), Bildungsausgaben:
Budget für Bildung, Forschung und Wissenschaft 2011/12. [9] Latest available data, Eurostat database. [10] The expert commission on research and innovation appointed by the
federal government recommends increasing the expenditure targets to 8 % of GDP
for education and 3.5 % for research and development by 2020 (Expertenkommission
Forschung und Innovation (2013), Gutachten zu Forschung, Innovation und
Technologischer Leistungsfähigkeit Deutschlands). [11] Gross fixed capital formation of general government declined steadily
from 2.6 % of GDP in 1992 to a low of 1.4 % of GDP in 2005 and stabilised
thereafter. In 2000-12, it was on average 1.1 % of GDP below the euro‑area
average, excluding Germany as well as Spain and Ireland, which experienced
strong construction booms (Commission services’ calculations based on Ameco
database). [12] Kunert, U. and H. Link (2013), Transport infrastructure: Higher
investments needed to preserve assets, DIW Economic Bulletin, No 10/2013. [13] Bundesministerium für Verkehr, Bau und
Stadtentwicklung (2012), Verkehr in Zahlen 2012/2013; Bundesrat
(2012), Zukunft der Verkehrsinfrastrukturfinanzierung. Abschlussbericht
der Kommission ‘Zukunft der Verkehrsinfrastrukturfinanzierung’. [14] CDU, CSU and SPD (2013), Deutschlands
Zukunft gestalten. Koalitionsvertrag zwischen CDU, CSU und SPD. 18. Legislaturperiode. [15] Bavaria, Hamburg, Hessen, Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania,
Rhineland-Palatinate, Saxony and Schleswig-Holstein have enshrined debt brakes
in their respective constitutions and Baden‑Württemberg, Lower Saxony,
Saxony-Anhalt and Thuringia in their budget laws. [16] Annual ceilings for the structural deficit to 2020 and provisions
for the calculation of structural balances have been laid down in
administrative agreements with the Länder receiving consolidation assistance
(Berlin, Bremen, Schleswig-Holstein, Saarland and Saxony-Anhalt). [17] Empirical analyses suggest that the higher the share is of a Land’s
additional tax revenues that will be reallocated to other Länder
through the Finanzausgleich, the lower are the performance and
efficiency indicators of its tax administration (Altemeyer-Bartscher, M. and G.
Zeddies (2013), ‘Dezentrale Steuerverwaltung und interregionaler Wettbewerb
im deutschen Finanzföderalismus’, IWH, Wirtschaft im Wandel, Vol. 19,
No 5). Shortcomings have also been identified in the Länder’s
administration of joint taxes whose revenues are shared between the federation,
Länder and municipalities (Der Präsident des Bundesrechnungshofes (2006),
‘Probleme beim Vollzug der Steuergesetze’, Schriftenreihe des
Bundesbeauftragten für Wirtschaftlichkeit in der Verwaltung, Band 13, Verlag W. Kohlhammer). [18] See Table V. The medium-term sustainability gap (S1) indicator
shows the upfront adjustment effort required, in terms of a steady improvement
in the structural primary balance to be introduced until 2020, and then
sustained for a decade, to bring debt ratios back to 60 % of GDP in 2030,
including financing for any additional expenditure until the target date,
arising from an ageing population. The following thresholds were used to assess
the scale of the sustainability challenge: (i) if the S1 value is less than
zero, the country is assigned low risk; (ii) if a structural adjustment in the
primary balance of up to 0.5 pp. of GDP per year until 2020 after the last year
covered by the autumn 2013 forecast (year 2015) is required (indicating an
cumulated adjustment of 2.5 pps.), it is assigned medium risk; and, (iii) if it
is greater than 2.5 (meaning a structural adjustment of more than 0.5 pp. of
GDP per year is necessary), it is assigned high risk. [19] Projected ageing costs comprise long-term projections of public
age-related expenditure on pension, health care, long-term care, education and
unemployment benefits (see for details European Commission (2012), The 2012
ageing report, European Economy, No 2/2012). The recently adopted pension
reform is taken into account in the initial budgetary position, but not in the
long-term projections of ageing costs. [20] See Table V. The long-term sustainability gap (S2) indicator
shows the immediate and permanent adjustment required to satisfy an
inter-temporal budgetary constraint, including the costs of ageing. The S2
indicator has two components: (i) the initial budgetary position (IBP) which
gives the gap to the debt stabilising primary balance; and (ii) the additional
adjustment required due to the costs of ageing. The main assumption used in the
derivation of S2 is that in an infinite horizon, the growth in the debt ratio
is bounded by the interest rate differential (i.e. the difference between the
nominal interest and the real growth rates); thereby not necessarily implying
that the debt ratio will fall below the EU Treaty 60% debt threshold. The
following thresholds for the S2 indicator were used: (i) if the value of S2 is
lower than 2, the country is assigned low risk; (ii) if it is between 2 and 6,
it is assigned medium risk; and, (iii) if it is greater than 6, it is assigned
high risk. [21] Latest available data, Eurostat database. [22] The age limit for early retirement without pension reductions is
planned to be raised gradually from 63 to 65 in line with the increase in the
statutory retirement age from 65 to 67. [23] Of the additional EUR 9 billion estimated for 2015,
EUR 6.7 billion would be spent on Mütterrente,
EUR 1.9 billion on Rente mit 63 and EUR 0.2 billion each
on improved benefits for people with reduced earning capacity and
rehabilitation measures. The expenditure on Rente mit 63 and improved
benefits for people with reduced earning capacity are expected to increase
further in the long term. [24] The average replacement rate is projected to decline due to the
effect of the ‘sustainability factor’ (Nachhaltigkeitsfaktor), which
ensures a maximum pension contribution rate of 22 % in 2030. [25] OECD (2013), Pensions at a glance 2013: OECD and G20
indicators, OECD Publishing. [26] European Commission (2014), Taxation trends in the European
Unionֹ. [27] The municipal real‑estate tax dates back to market values of
1963/64 in the western Länder and 1935 in the eastern Länder. [28] According to Commission estimates based on the OECD tax and
benefits model, the tax wedge in Germany for workers (single person without
children) earning 50 % of the average wage was 42.5 % in 2012 vs 34.7 % in the
EU-27 and for workers earning 67 % of the average wage 45.6 % vs 39.9 % in the
EU‑27. [29] While income below the mini-job threshold is exempt from income
tax, if the income is above that threshold, the full income is subject to joint
income taxation. [30] Deutsche Bundesbank (2014), financial soundness
indicators (FSI); European Central Bank (2014), consolidated banking data; IMF
FSI. [31] European Central Bank (2014), Eurosystem bank lending survey
and Survey on the access to finance of SMEs in the euro area (SAFE). [32] For further details, see the 2014 Joint
Employment Report, COM(2013)801, which includes a scoreboard of key employment
and social indicators. [33] The proportion of employees covered by collective bargaining
agreements decreased from 74 % to 58 % in Germany between 1998 and 2012 (Bundesregierung
(2014), Entwurf eines Gesetzes zur Stärkung der Tarifautonomie). [34] In 2012, 23 % of employees in the eastern Länder, 14 % in the
western Länder and more than 30 % in companies with fewer than 10
employees earned less than EUR 8.50 an hour. 20 % of female employees
earned less than EUR 8.50 an hour vs. 11 % of male employees and almost
two-thirds of employees earning less than EUR 8.50 an hour were women.
Overall, in 2012 15 % or 5.2 million employees earned less than EUR 8.50
an hour. Assuming further wage increases over the coming years, the proportion
of workers affected by the minimum wage in 2017 would be lower (Brenke, K.
(2014), Mindestlohn: Zahl der anspruchsberechtigten Arbeitnehmer wird weit
unter fünf Millionen liegen, DIW Wochenbericht No 5). [35] Using four estimates for the German median wage, Kluve (2013)
finds that the effective minimum wage (quotient of the minimum and the median
wages) in Germany is high compared with other countries (Kluve, J. (2013), Was
ist der optimale Mindestlohn? So hoch wie möglich,
so niedrig wie nötig, RWI Position No 53). The proportion of German employees for whom a minimum wage of
EUR 8.50 an hour is expected to be binding appears high, for example
compared with the proportion of employees earning less than 105 % of the
minimum wage in other Member States, as shown by a Eurostat survey for 2010 (Eurostat
(2010), Structure of Earnings Survey). [36] See Brenke, K. and K. U. Müller (2013), Gesetzlicher
Mindestlohn — Kein verteilungspolitisches Allheilmittel, DIW Wochenbericht
No 39. [37] Out of the 4.9 million people working only in mini-jobs at the end
of 2011, 35 % were homemakers, 22 % pensioners, 20 % students and 11 %
unemployed. Almost 50 % of the employees interviewed were satisfied with their
situation and 27 % were searching for more work (25 % would have liked to work
more but could not for some reason). Students and pensioners in particular are
unlikely to be interested in a regular job. Körner, T.,
Meinken, H. and Puch, K. (2013), Wer sind die ausschließlich geringfügig
Beschäftigten? Eine Analyse nach sozialer Lebenslage. Satistisches
Bundesamt, Wirtschaft und Statistik. [38] Fenge, R. (2012), Vorsorge gegen
Altersarmut, ifo Schnelldienst, Vol. 65, No 21; Goebel, J. and M.M.
Grabka (2011), Zur Entwicklung der Altersarmut in Deutschland, DIW Wochenbericht
No 25. [39] The number of beneficiaries of Grundsicherung aged 65 and
above increased by 80 % between 2003 and 2012 (Commission services’ calculation
based on Destatis data). [40] The take-up of private pension insurance is not mandatory, but
subsidised in order to offset the downward trend in the replacement rate of
statutory pensions. The coverage is particularly low among low-wage earners,
individuals with only basic education and migrants (Promberger, M.,
C. Wübbeke and A. Zylowski (2012), Private Altersvorsorge fehlt, wo sie
am nötigsten ist, IAB-Kurzbericht, No 15/2012; Geyer, J.
(2012), Riester-Rente und Niedrigeinkommen — Was sagen die Daten?, DIW Vierteljahreshefte
zur Wirtschaftsforschung, Vol. 81, No 2). [41] See for example Sachverständigenrat
(2013), Gegen eine rückwärtsgewandte Wirtschaftspolitik, Jahresgutachten
2013/14. [42] Federal Statistical Office. [43] Only 3 % of staff in childcare centres (Tageseinrichtungen)
have a relevant tertiary degree. Around one third of staff in day-care centres
(Tagespflege) have followed a pedagogical training, while 41 % have had
less than 160 hours of training or no training. (Data for
2011; see KMK and BMBF (2012), Bildung in Deutschland 2012). [44] See Aktionsrat Bildung (2013), Zwischenbilanz
Ganztagsgrundschulen: Betreuung oder Rhythmisierung? [45] Institut zur Qualitätsentwicklung im Bildungswesen (2013), Ländervergleich
2012. Mathematische und naturwissenschaftliche Kompetenzen am Ende der
Sekundarstufe I, Waxmann Publishing Co. [46] The rate of early school leaving for people without disabilities
is lower in Germany than in the EU as a whole (6.9 % as compared with 11 %), but
higher for people with disabilities (20.6 % as compared with 18.9 % in 2011) (Eurostat
(2014), EU Statistics on Income and Living Conditions (EU-SILC)). [47] Final goods
sector mark-ups is the difference between the selling price of a good/service
and its cost. Entry cost refers to the cost of starting a business in the
intermediate sector. The implicit consumption tax rate is a proxy for shifting
taxation away from labour to indirect taxes. The benefit replacement rate is
the % of a worker's
pre-unemployment income that is paid out by the unemployment scheme. For a
detailed explanation of indicators see Annex. [48] For a detailed explanation
of the transmission mechanisms of the reform scenarios see: European Commission
(2013), "The growth impact of structural reforms", Chapter 2 in QREA No.
4 December 2013. Brussels; http://ec.europa.eu/economy_finance/publications/qr_euro_area/2013/pdf/qrea4_section_2_en.pdf. [49] Professional services comprise professional, scientific and
technical activities (section M in NACE Rev. 2). With the exception of
scientific research and development, real gross value added per head or per
working hour has been on a downward trend for at least a decade in those
sectors (aggregates MA and MC according to the WZ 2008 classification of
the Federal Statistical Office). [50] C(2014) 2322 [51] According to the OECD Product Market Regulation indicators,
professional services — in particular the services of architects, engineers and
lawyers — are highly regulated in Germany as compared with most other OECD
countries and little progress has been made in this area since 2008 (OECD
(2014), Germany — Keeping the edge: competitiveness for inclusive growth,
OECD Better Policies Series). [52] The median contract value in Germany was close to the median
value of all EU countries in 2011/2012 (PwC, ICF GHK and Ecorys (2014), SMEs'
access to public procurement markets and aggregation of demand in the EU,
study commissioned by the European Commission). This together with the low
aggregate value suggests that the total number of contracts published in Germany under EU procurement legislation was comparatively low. [53] OECD Broadband Statistics. [54] COM(2013) 624 final. [55] Expertenkommission Forschung und Innovation
(2014), Gutachten zu Forschung, Innovation und
Technologischer Leistungsfähigkeit Deutschlands. [56] Nationaler Normenkontrollrat (2013), Kostentransparenz verbessert,
Entlastung forcieren. Jahresbericht 2013. Regulations in the context of the energy transition (Energiewende)
and in the financial markets were the main drivers of the increase in
compliance costs. [57] OECD (2013), Tax administration 2013: Comparative information
on OECD and other advanced and emerging economies. [58] According to a ranking of tax arrangements across 189 economies
in terms of the ease of paying taxes, the time required by a medium-sized case‑study
company in Germany to comply with tax requirements amounted to 218 hours in
2012, against an EU/EFTA average of under 180 hours. In particular, the number
of hours needed to comply with labour taxes, including social security
contributions, is relatively high in Germany (PwC and World Bank/IFC (2013), Paying
taxes 2014: The global picture — A comparison of tax systems in 189 economies
worldwide). [59] European Commission (2014), Macroeconomic imbalances — Germany
2014, European Economy, Occasional Papers, No 174. [60] The following categories are used to assess progress in
implementing the 2013 country-specific recommendations:
No progress: The Member State has neither announced nor adopted any
measures to address the country-specific recommendation. This category also
applies if a Member State has commissioned a study group to evaluate possible
measures.
Limited progress: The Member State has announced some measures to
address the country-specific recommendation, but these measures appear
insufficient and/or their adoption/implementation is at risk.
Some progress: The Member State has announced or adopted measures to
address the country-specific recommendation. These measures are promising, but
not all of them have been implemented yet and implementation is not certain in
all cases.
Substantial progress: The Member State has adopted measures, most of
which have been implemented. These measures go a long way in addressing the country-specific
recommendation.
Fully addressed: The Member State has adopted and implemented measures
that address the country-specific recommendation appropriately. [61] Commission services calculations based on annual data from the
Labour Force Survey of Eurostat. [62] The real estate sector is excluded because of statistical difficulties
of estimating a mark-up in this sector. The sector renting of machinery and equipment
and other business activities is conceptually part of intermediate goods
sector.