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Vice or virtue? Berlin exhibition charts Germans’ penny-pinching mania

While the European Union gears up for another of its endless post-crisis bouts over spending, debt and deficits, Berlin's German Historical Museum has turned a microscope onto the mania for saving in Europe's largest economy.

Vice or virtue? Berlin exhibition charts Germans' penny-pinching mania
A visitor at the 'Saving: History of a German virtue' exhibition. Photo: DPA

“Merkel's bullying”, “Queen of austerity”, “German dogma”: headlines from around the EU greet visitors to the baroque pile on the leafy Unter den Linden boulevard that houses the museum.

All are relics of Berlin's insistence that eurozone members stick to strict limits on debts and deficits at the height of the currency bloc's post-2008 financial blues.

Politicians and the public have been puzzled by the rage from other nations, while Spaniards, Italians and above all Greeks have cursed Berlin for soaring unemployment and slashed government services.

“These attacks meet with little understanding in Germany. Why is this conflict so highly charged emotionally?” questioned museum chief professor Raphael Gross.

To most Germans, saving around 10 percent of their income has long been an “unquestioned virtue” come war, inflation, famine or fortune, Gross noted.

Witness to that fact are some €2.3 trillion ($2.8 trillion) socked away in savings accounts or under mattresses, according to a January report by Germany's central bank, the Bundesbank.

Curator Robert Muschalla said he deliberately wanted to provoke with the title of the exhibition — “Saving: History of a German virtue”.

“The idea isn't to say that saving is good or bad, it's about opening a debate on a topic that is seen as self-evident in Germany… saving has become internalized into a habit,” he explained.


Photo: DPA

Gold for iron

To understand Germans' nest-egg neurosis, visitors must look back to the 18th century, when the building that today houses the museum was the arsenal of militaristic Prussia.

Like neighbouring France, Prussia and other German states were roiled by emancipatory ideas spread by the Enlightenment thinkers of the time.

But “while the French carried out their Revolution [in 1789], the Germans invented saving” as the foundation of personal autonomy and a means to pay for education, Muschalla pointed out.

The first of the Sparkasse savings banks that dot cityscapes to this day was opened in free city Hamburg in 1778.

SEE ALSO: In rural Germany, 'mobile banking' means a bank on a truck

Prussia boasted some 278,000 savings accounts by 1850 and 2.2 million by 1875.

To a state that had asked citizens to fund its war effort against Napoleon by exchanging gold jewellery for iron rings, the savings system was a natural bulwark against enemies within and without.

Communist thinker Karl Marx raged in “Das Kapital” — a first edition of which can be seen among the exhibits — that workers' cash piles kept them invested in the capitalist system, giving them something to lose in case of a revolution.

And when World War I broke out in 1914, ordinary citizens' savings again helped foot the bill for the bloodletting.

Truckloads of cash

At the heart of the exhibition stands the symbol of what came next — a replica of the wheelbarrows used to haul stacks of near-worthless banknotes through the streets during the hyperinflation of the early 1920s.

Adolf Hitler's Nazi party was quick to seize on the opportunity, placing “saving in opposition to lending,” curator Muschalla said.

A “background noise of anti-Semitism” painted finance and credit as the province of their preferred scapegoat for Germany's ills, the Jews, he added.

Propaganda posters from 1938 — five years after the Nazis seized power — hailed “those who work and save” as the guardians of “German tradition”.

Under Hitler's Third Reich, a “Sparautomat” or savings machine was installed in many schools, allowing children to deposit pennies and pull a lever to mark their savings books.

Meanwhile, the regime began confiscating Jews' bank deposits in 1938, a few years before it began deporting them to forced labour and extermination camps.

'Stinginess is cool'

After the Nazis' 1945 defeat, the new Federal Republic of Germany turned westwards and became a thriving capitalist economy.

But unlike Americans or western European neighbours, the new Germans still shunned purchases on credit, hoarding their deutsche marks until they could afford a car, fridge or television — and keeping the savings machines in schools, minus the Nazi propaganda.

A poster preserved in the exhibition blares the “Geiz ist geil” — “stinginess is cool” — slogan used by the Saturn electronics chain in the 2000s.

In a society still obsessed with discount supermarkets and money-off coupons, saving is a “German pathology” lamented Die Welt newspaper columnist Henryk M. Broder in a video.

“'Geiz ist geil' is really the worst phrase — except for 'Heil Hitler' — ever invented in this country,” he said.

READ ALSO: Will the German love affair with cash ever end?

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PROPERTY

Why buying property in Austria remains unaffordable for most

Buying a home in Austria is a dream for many international residents, but it remains out of reach for the average earner.

Why buying property in Austria remains unaffordable for most

Many people living in Austria dream of one day owning a home, but despite recent drops in property prices and interest rates, this dream is still out of reach for many average earners. 

In Austria, it is recommended to not spend more than 40 percent of a monthly income on debt repayment.

But new analysis by tariff comparison portal durchblicker.at reveals that even a double-income household would need to spend around 60 percent of their income to afford a 90m² new-build apartment in Vienna.

While the government has created initiatives to improve the affordability, with attractive housing packages, fee reductions and eliminations of certain fees, such as the “Grundbucheintragsgebühr” (land register entry fee) and “Pfandrechtseintragungsgebühr” (mortgage registration fee) for properties up to a certain value, their impact has been limited.

Furthermore, the governments initiatives often overlook the specific needs of lower-income households and may benefit those who are already financially stable, leaving the average earner still struggling to afford a home, according to Der Standard.

READ ALSO: ‘Haushaltsversicherung’ – How does Austria’s home insurance work?

High prices, rates and strict lending criteria

One of the biggest barriers to owning a home in Austria is simply the sky-high property prices. Over the years, property prices have increased, making it more difficult for people with an average income to afford a place of their own. Even with recent minor dips in prices, they still remain high.

Another factor making owning a home challenging is the increase in interest rates in recent years. As a result, both existing variable-rate loans and newly obtained fixed-rate loans have become more expensive. Analysts expect the European Central Bank to cut interest rates by around 0.5 percent in the near future, but according to durchblicker’s calculations, this would initially only create a little relief for loan takers, where instead of around 60 percent, 55 percent of monthly household net income would be needed for debt repayment.

Another issue preventing many from realising their dream to buy a home is the difficulty in obtaining a mortgage. Since July 2022, stricter rules have applied in Austria for the granting of property loans. Loan applicants must have a deposit worth at least 20 percent of the value of their property to be granted a loan, according to the financial online platform Finanz.at. This means that even applicants with higher incomes may struggle to get their dream financed. 

Furthermore, many loan takers with variable-rate loans, especially those recently obtained, are facing significant challenges. The variable interest rates have increased significantly since the initiation of these loans, resulting in higher monthly repayments, reported Der Standard.

Few people can afford their own home in Austria, especially in Vienna. Photo by Christian Lendl on Unsplash

Experts suggests fixed rate loans and cooperative housing models

Andreas Ederer, Head of Banking at durchblicker.at, recommends loan takers with variable-rate loans to change to fixed-rate loans. He suggests that fixed-rate loans have become more attractive as they are currently cheaper than variable-rate loans, reported Kurier

Unlike fixed-rate loans, which have a steady interest rate throughout the loan term, variable-rate loans can change over time in response to shifts in market conditions or the economy.

Experts also suggest alternative models for increasing affordability. One idea is to create more opportunities for cooperative ownership with mandatory purchase options. This could offer a more affordable option where costs such as maintenance and taxes are shared. According to Der Standard, cooperatives also often have access to loans with better terms.

READ NEXT: How can I move into affordable cooperative housing in Vienna?

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