Germany's municipalities are deep in the red, but the union is demanding an 8 per cent pay rise for federal and municipal employees. How can this be squared? In an interview with Deutschlandfunk, Michael Thöne looks at the valid arguments on both sides of the bargaining table. The hefty packages of new public debt emerging from the coalition negotiations in Berlin are intended to pay for defence and infrastructure, but they will also – albeit deceptively – ease the fiscal pressure on all public spending. But collective bargaining cannot solve the actual economic problem: the worsening shortage of skilled labour must be addressed with structural solutions – through bureaucratic streamlining, the use of high-tech and through qualified immigration.

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