German government, unions agree to wage deal for public workers
Workers walk on train tracks of German railway operator Deutsche Bahn at the main railway station in Hagen, western Germany, March 24, 2023.


Ending a lengthy dispute, German government officials and labor unions have reached a pay deal for more than 2.5 million public-sector workers, preventing disruptive all-out strikes.

The ver.di Union had pressed for hefty raises as Germany grapples with high inflation like many other countries. However, interior Minister Nancy Faeser said as the deal was announced around midnight Sunday that "we accommodated the unions as far as we could responsibly do in a difficult budget situation."

The deal entails one-time tax-free payments totaling 3,000 euros ($3,300) per employee, with the first 1,240 euros coming in June and monthly payments of 220 euros until February.

In March, monthly payments for all will be increased by 200 euros, followed by a salary increase of 5.5% – with a minimum raise of 340 euros per month assured. The deal runs through the end of 2024.

Ver.di initially sought a one-year deal with a raise of 10.5%. Instead, the agreement was reached based on the arbitrators’ proposal after talks broke out last month.

Ver.di Chair Frank Werneke said, "We went to our pain threshold with the decision to make this compromise." He said that the raises in regular pay next year would amount to an increase of over 11% for most employees of federal and municipal governments.

Over recent months, the union has staged frequent walkouts to underline its demands, with local transport, hospitals and other public services hit.

Germany’s annual inflation rate has declined from the levels it reached late last year but is still high. It stood at 7.4% in March.

The past few months have seen plenty of other tense pay negotiations in Europe’s biggest economy, some of which have yet to be concluded.

In a joint show of strength, ver.di and the EVG union – representing many railway workers – staged a one-day strike last month that paralyzed much of the country’s transport network.

EVG, whose members walked off the job again on Friday, is seeking a 12% raise and has rejected the idea of negotiating a deal based on the arbitration proposal that helped resolve the public workers’ dispute. The next round of talks is set for Tuesday.

And ver.di is still in a dispute with Germany’s airport security companies association over pay and conditions for security staff.

In the latest string of walkouts, it has called on security workers at Berlin Airport to walk out on Monday. As a result, the airport says there will be no departures all day.