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Karl Lauterbach shakes the group during the pension discussion

Lauterbach Warns of Pension Cuts as ⁢Coalition Grapples with Funding Crisis

Berlin – A coalition committee discussion on‌ Germany’s pension funding ‌took‌ a dramatic turn when Health Minister⁣ Karl Lauterbach warned⁣ that canceling a planned ​€120 billion fund would trigger pension cuts‍ as early as 2032. Lauterbach stated the pension level would fall from⁤ 48 to 47 percent, necessitating‍ direct cuts to pensioner payments. The revelation, corroborated ⁣by economist⁢ Hans-Werner Sinn, has thrown the already fraught negotiations into further turmoil and exposed deep fissures within ⁢the governing coalition.

The debate centers on the⁣ future of‌ a special fund intended to secure Germany’s pension system amid demographic shifts. While ⁢the Junge ⁣Union (JU) initially proposed a slower increase in pension payments rather than outright cuts, Lauterbach’s stark‌ warning highlighted the​ potential consequences of abandoning the €120 billion fund. Sinn proposed an alternative solution: delaying⁢ retirement age by ten months to stabilize the pension level without ​tax increases or benefit reductions.

According⁣ to reporting from The Pioneer, chancellor Friedrich Merz has found himself in a‍ political ⁢”dead end” due to the pension dispute, having maneuvered the SPD, the Junge Union,⁢ and his own CDU/CSU into a tough position.‌ the number of potential rebels within the coalition has reportedly grown from 18 to between 35 and 40 MPs who could vote ⁢against the ‌proposed pension package. Johannes Winkel, during the discussion, emphasized ​the statutory pension guarantee, stating pensioners “never ‍receive a cent less per‍ month” than previously.

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