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SCHOOLS

Could parents in Germany pay higher Kita fees to combat staff shortages?

State governments in Germany could soon lose the right to use federal funds to lower Kita fees for parents. Instead, the money will have to be spent on staffing.

kita in Dortmund
Children at a Kita in Dortmund help with planting in February. Photo: picture alliance/dpa | Bernd Thissen

In many daycare (Kita) centres around Germany, the situation is precarious: skeletal staffing has led to burnout and overwhelm among workers. Also short-notice closures, sometimes for related staff strikes, often leave parents scrambling to find alternative childcare.

As services union Verdi wages a battle for better working conditions in Kitas, the Ministry of Family affairs is drafting new plans to tackle these desperate staff shortages.

According to a draft of the Childcare Quality Act obtained by DPA, state governments could face restrictions in future in the way they spend federal funds.

From 2025, the €2 billion provided by the Family Ministry to state governments should be used primarily for hiring and training new staff, rather than offering reduced Kita fees for families.

READ ALSO: The nine things you need to do after having a baby in Germany

Currently, up to 49 percent of this federal funding can be used by states to reduce daycare fees or abolish them entirely. 

The new law, which is due to be discussed in cabinet in the coming weeks, would remove this possibility. 

Will parents pay more in future?

Though the plans raise the spectre of higher Kita fees for parents, Family Minister Lisa Paus (Greens) believes that hikes are unlikely.

According to the ministry, only six of Germany’s 16 states currently use federal funds for offering reduced childcare costs.

In Berlin, for example, where families pay no more than a small administrative fee for their child’s Kita place, money from the state coffers is used to finance the reduction.

If the draft law comes into force on January 1st, 2025, a six-month transition be will in place to allow states to consider other options.

During this time, regional family ministers can continue financing reduced Kita fees using federal funds.

READ ALSO: How expensive is childcare across Germany?

After that, the ministry believes that states that want to offer cheaper Kita spots can use state tax revenues to do so, while using federal money solely for recruiting qualified staff.

However, it’s unclear if states currently have the available funds to do this.

Another question that remains is whether the measure will be enough to provide the number of new staff needed over the coming years.

According to Paus, there is likely to be a shortage of 50,000 to 90,000 skilled workers in Germany’s daycare centres by 2030 – but an alternative estimate by the Paritätische Wohlfahrtsverband suggests this number could be as high as 125,000.

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WORKING IN GERMANY

Germany’s Lower Saxony state premier Weil calls for 15 euro minimum wage

Lower Saxony's Minister President Stephan Weil (SPD) has called for the country's minimum wage to increase to at least 14 euros from 12.41 euros currently, according to media reports on Saturday.

Germany's Lower Saxony state premier Weil calls for 15 euro minimum wage

“The goal must be a minimum wage of 14 or 15 euros in order to keep pace with inflation,” he told the news portal T-online on Saturday, explaining that work is worthwhile above all when it is paid fairly.

“But that is not the case for millions of people in Germany,” he said.

“Those who work for the minimum wage have less and less left at the end of the month in times of inflation,” the state premier added.

At the same time, Weil called for tougher sanctions for people receiving Bürgergeld (citizens’ allowance), the long-term unemployment benefit.

“We are currently experiencing a change in direction for the citizen’s allowance and that is correct,” he told T-online. “Anyone who refuses reasonable work must feel that too.” The debate about people receiving citizen’s allowance who could work but do not want to has damaged the SPD in recent months.

READ ALSO: ‘Far too low’: How millions of workers in Germany are earning less than €14 per hour

In an interview in mid-May, Chancellor Olaf Scholz (SPD) already spoke out in favour of gradually increasing the minimum wage to 15 euros.

In doing so, he also triggered a debate about the independent work of the Minimum Wage Commission. Demands for a higher minimum wage then also came from the ranks of the SPD, the Greens, the Left and trade unions.

The minimum wage was raised in October 2022 in a one-off step to 12 euros per hour.

The Minimum Wage Commission then decided on further increases annually, as usual. Since the beginning of 2024, the minimum wage level has been 12.41 euros, and a further increase of 41 cents is planned for the beginning of 2025.

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