"Prevent a sharp increase": Heil: Pension contributions will only increase slightly after 2025

In two years, the applicable upper limit in the statutory pension insurance expires.

"Prevent a sharp increase": Heil: Pension contributions will only increase slightly after 2025

In two years, the applicable upper limit in the statutory pension insurance expires. However, Minister of Labor Hubertus Heil promises that the contributions will not increase dramatically afterwards. Only a slight increase is planned from 2025.

Federal Minister of Labor Hubertus Heil has assured that the contribution rate in the statutory pension insurance system will only have to be raised moderately by the end of the decade after the limit that applies until 2025. There are currently five million more employees subject to social security contributions than predicted ten years ago, Heil told the newspapers of the editorial network Germany. As a result, the contribution rate could be kept at the previous level for longer than expected.

"The rate will only increase slightly in the second half of the 2020s," said Heil. "My goal is to prevent an excessive increase afterwards." This is possible "if we do our homework on the subject of securing skilled workers" and also "reduce the contributions" through the share pension. He wants to stabilize the statutory pension "in the long term so that people can continue to rely on good old-age provision in the future."

The traffic light coalition plans to extend the so-called stop line at the pension level, which will secure a level of 48 percent by 2025. The second stop line, which is intended to prevent the contribution rate from rising above 20 percent, should not be continued after 2025.

Heil defended Finance Minister Christian Lindner's plan to initially take on debt of ten billion euros in order to invest it in the capital market and use the proceeds to dampen pension contributions from the mid-2030s. "It's not about any gambles on the financial markets, but about long-term money to strengthen the statutory pension," said Heil.

The SPD minister was also willing to use further funds for the share pension, now officially known as "generational capital". "If the finance minister sees scope for further sums, I'll be happy to look at it," he said. "But it's also clear that the more money the finance minister invests sensibly and over the long term in generational capital, the higher the returns will be later in order to dampen the contributions. As the minister responsible for pensions, I can't have anything against that."