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Germany looks to ban calling in sick, would require doctors’ notes immediately

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German Federal Chancellor Friedrich Merz, centre, attends a press conference with Minister-President of Bavaria and CSU Chairman Markus Söder, left, Federal Minister of Labor and Social Affairs Bärbel Bas, right and Federal Minister of Finance, Lars Klingbeil, in the garden of the Chancellery following the meeting of the coalition committee, in Berlin, Thursday, July 2, 2026. (Michael Kappeler/dpa via AP)

BERLIN -- German Chancellor Friedrich Merz outlined a package of pension, tax and labor reforms on Thursday, along with measures to cut red tape that he said would boost growth, jobs and competitiveness while maintaining social welfare protections.

Merz said the government aimed to pass the main elements of the 34-point package through parliament by the end of the year.

Pensions

Implement recommendations of the pension commission that would introduce an additional capital markets-based element to the state pension system, along with a gradual increase in the retirement age over coming decades.

Tax relief for households

Income tax relief for households of more than €600 (US$685) for a working family with two children through higher allowances and an easing of progression for middle incomes. The measures would bring an estimated relief of €10 billion annually.

The measures would be financed in part by raising the top rate of tax to 47 per cent from 45 per cent for the highest earners with an annual taxable income of €280,000 or more.

Labour market reforms

In an effort to reduce days lost through sick leave, workers would not be able to call in sick by telephone but would require medical certificates from day one.

Companies would be offered greater scope to offer fixed-term contracts for up to 48 months for new hires through to 2030. They would also be offered greater freedom for dismissal-with-compensation arrangements for very high earners.

Industry and technology

Measures to support key sectors including automotive, chemicals and pharmaceuticals, clean technology, machinery, batteries, semiconductors, artificial intelligence.

The Deutschlandfonds investment funding framework would be expanded into a strategic investment vehicle focused on resilience, energy and raw materials.

Crackdown on welfare abuse

Measures against benefits fraud to be tightened with more data sharing among authorities and improved enforcement.

Energy and infrastructure

Expansion of the electricity distribution-grid to be accelerated with the aim of cutting network project implementation times by half. Industry to get clearer guarantees about grid connection timelines.

Trade

Strengthen EU anti-dumping and anti-subsidy measures and EU preference rules. Technology-transfer requirements to be considered in certain strategic sectors involving non-European investments.

Housing

Create a federal housing company to build affordable housing and ease requirements on property lending to stimulate mortgage financing. Pass legislation to prevent conversion to public control of private rental housing by regional authorities.

Deregulation and bureaucracy cutting measures

Cut in reporting and documentation requirements and cut in corporate compliance burdens, including limiting supply chain due diligence obligations to very large companies.

The measures would include automatic approval of applications after four months unless authorities intervene and a target 8 per cent reduction in staffing across much of the federal administration.

Reporting by James Mackenzie, editing by Kirsti Knolle and Jon Boyle, Reuters