How Miraculous

Hidden behind the so-called German economic miracle is an underclass of low-paid employees whose incomes have benefited little from the country’s stability and in fact have shrunk in real terms over the last decade.

Despite Germany’s renowned inflation-fighting efforts, which kept consumer price increases at an average of 1.7 percent a year from 2000 to 2010, more and more low-income Germans report that they cannot make ends meet despite having a job and that they must rely upon state aid to supplement their income.

Nowhere is this deepening chasm more visible than in Berlin-Mitte, the prosperous center of the capital, full of handsome government buildings and fine restaurants that cater to officials and lobbyists.

On a rainy summer morning here, only a 10-minute walk from the glamorous Unter Den Linden boulevard, hundreds of poorly dressed men and women lined up inside the district employment office. Some of them had come to look for work, some were applying for state help and some just wanted to accompany a friend.

“They cannot live off their income. Their wages are just too low. They have no choice but to receive help from the state.”

2 responses

  1. That aside, it’s a genuine achievement to be able to keep inflation at 1,7%, and something those evil geniuses in the olympus of German economics could only manage to begin with. The rest fo the developed world is normally at 3-3.5%, and significantly higher in specific key areas at various times like housing (was), and fuel and medical care (are).

    Of course, this came after the purchasing power hit everyone took migrating to the Euro, something that it takes a few years to “un-inflate” out of. So BRAVO to the olympus of German economics, you’ve done a heck of a lot better than the rest of civilization.

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