Opinion
Guest
Essay
Germany
Has Lots of Problems. This Is Its Biggest.
June 1,
2026, 1:00 a.m. ET
By
Konstantin Richter
Mr.
Richter is the author of a book about the rise and fall of corporate Germany.
He wrote from Berlin.
https://www.nytimes.com/2026/06/01/opinion/germany-economy-merz-trump.html
It’s a
tough time for Germany.
A year
into Chancellor Friedrich Merz’s tenure, his approval ratings are low and the
coalition government he leads is roundly disliked. Capitalizing on widespread
discontent, the far-right Alternative for Germany is rising in the polls,
inching closer to power. To make matters worse, America, in a Trumpian tantrum,
has announced a withdrawal of troops from the country, endangering its bedrock
geopolitical relationship. All the features that defined Germany’s recent past
— political stability, social cohesion and Atlanticist foreign policy — are
under threat.
Yet
underlying all these problems is a more profound one. The German economy, once
known for its efficiency, orderliness and stability, is in a terrible mess.
It’s not just that the numbers are dire, though the country has basically been
in a recession for three years. Or that every week or so, another famous old
company announces thousands of layoffs (the latest was Commerzbank, founded in
1870). Or that last month, the venerable weekly Die Zeit ran a series called
“Where Germany still works” — which means the situation must be pretty bad
indeed.
No, the
worst of it is that our dynamic economy gave postwar Germany a sense of
identity. For all our flaws, we had a country that functioned better than
others. Now it doesn’t anymore, and we’re mystified. Yet a better economy is
possible. It might not alter the country’s political trajectory, and it
certainly won’t placate an aggrieved President Trump. But it can turn the tide
on stagnation and restore the fabled resilience of German businesses.
Commentators
tend to focus on today’s troubles. The economy’s rise and fall is a much older
story, though. At its most prosperous, Germany was a high-tax, high-wage,
big-bureaucracy country — something to remember for those whose recipe for
renewal is simply to cut the cost of doing business. In the postwar decades of
vigorous growth, the economy itself resembled the kind of product that it so
excellently manufactured, an expensive and highly complicated machine whose
cogs meshed.
Those
cogs included an education system geared toward supplying businesses with
technically proficient workers; managers trained as engineers or scientists
rather than as generalists; banks and insurers with major stakes in the largest
companies and focused on long-term goals over short-term profits; and stable
labor relations that offered workers secure and well-paid jobs as well as a
vote in key decisions. Together, these elements contributed to the
technological superiority long associated with the Made-in-Germany brand.
Yet when
the American economy pulled ahead in the 1990s, fueled by the financial muscle
of Wall Street and the fierce entrepreneurialism of Silicon Valley, we ran out
of ideas. Eager for something new, the economy opened up to foreign capital:
Banks and insurers sold their stakes in German companies and corporate
executives targeted international investors. In an attempt to regain
competitiveness, the government of Gerhard Schröder reformed the country’s
rigid labor market and did away with some of the protections that workers had
enjoyed.
On the
face of it, Germany thrived in the first two decades of the new century,
weathering the financial crisis better than others and hanging on to its
industrial core. But in hindsight, the country was on borrowed time.
Automakers, for instance, sold millions of cars in East Asia but failed to
invest in a much-needed transformation to electric vehicles. The same mix of
risk aversion and short-termism characterized other German companies, too. What
kept the profits coming was a combination of cheap Russian gas, a booming
Chinese market and the multilateral free-trade order led by the United States.
That
order is now gone, sundered by American protectionism, Chinese competition and
the disruption from artificial intelligence. But the setback needn’t be fatal.
The country can overhaul its business model, re-equipping the successful
elements of the old system for a newly hostile environment. There are three key
areas to focus on.
First,
the financing. Many German corporations are now majority-owned by non-German
investors, and some of the country’s vital Mittelstand firms — family-owned
medium-size enterprises — have been taken over by private equity or other
outside money. The influence of detached investors focused primarily on
financial results can be beneficial, of course. But it’s gone too far.
Established companies need the kind of solid backing that would allow them to
plan for the long term, and young companies need patient nurturing.
The
government seems to agree. Recognizing that too many of the country’s enormous
financial resources are languishing in real estate holdings or fixed-income
assets or personal savings accounts, it has established an investment
initiative named “Deutschlandfonds.” Designed to support private investors who
want to put money into growth industries and other strategically important
fields, the fund is a step in the right direction. More can surely be done.
Then
there’s education. The country’s famous dual-vocational system, which allows
students to complete their schooling in the workplace, long ensured that
industry got the kind of skilled labor it needed. But the system now lacks
applicants, partly because of demographic decline and partly because too many
young people choose to pursue other careers. Germany’s high school students,
what’s more, are struggling in the very subjects that the country used to excel
in: math and natural sciences.
Overall,
Germany is not investing enough in education — and not enough of the money
that’s invested goes toward promoting the scientific and technological
excellence that the economy so badly needs. Technical universities that have
produced legions of Nobel laureates are consistently placed behind
better-funded rivals elsewhere. A return to the audacious research projects of
the past, typically a collaboration between government, academia and private
enterprise, would be a start.
Finally,
the labor market. The country’s welfare state has become too expensive, and
Germans will need to work longer hours and more years to sustain it. Yet
changes should be pursued in the spirit of “Sozialpartnerschaft,” the
consensus-based labor relations that played an important role in the postwar
economy. Mutual trust has been eroded in recent decades, for which both parties
share responsibility. Business leaders squandered good will by awarding
themselves lavish salaries while the unions too often refused even minor
compromises and readily reverted to class-war language.
The
advent of artificial intelligence, intriguingly, might help. Given the scale of
the United States’ technological lead, it may sound naïve to suggest that
Germany could claim a share of the pie. But artificial intelligence is well
suited to complement the country’s traditional strengths in high-quality
engineering. And an approach that takes labor interests into account could
secure a desirable result: technology that improves the work of humans rather
than replaces them en masse.
There is
no returning to the past, of course. Yet something precious has been lost: an
innate confidence in the country’s strengths. Today, the mood in Germany seems
way too bleak. What’s missing is a cleareyed sense of where we should be
heading. To adapt, the economy — still the world’s third-largest — needs smart
investment, public support and a healthy dose of self-belief. That won’t end
the country’s problems, but it could put us back on the path to prosperity.


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