German business leaders are rejecting a proposed $1,080 (€1,000) tax-free relief bonus, arguing the government is effectively ordering a party and forcing employers to pick up the tab. The plan, designed to provide financial breathing room for workers, has instead triggered a wave of anger across the Mittelstand and major employer associations who claim the state is shifting its social responsibility onto private balance sheets.
Steffen Kampeter, managing director of the Confederation of German Employers‘ Associations (BDA), didn’t mince words when addressing the coalition’s strategy. He accused Chancellor Friedrich Merz and Finance Minister Lars Klingbeil of stoking expectations among the workforce only to outsource the actual payment to companies. Many firms, Kampeter noted, simply can’t afford the outlay given the current economic climate.
Business leaders call the bonus a shift in responsibility
The backlash is particularly visceral within Germany’s small and medium-sized enterprises. Christoph Ahlhaus, chairman of the BVMV SME association, described the proposal as an „unverschämtheit“—an outrage—that threatens to import unrest and anger directly into the workplace.
Bonita Grupp, co-CEO of Trigema, echoed this sentiment, warning that corporate margins are already too thin to absorb such a „transfer of responsibility.“ For these leaders, the government isn’t providing a solution; it’s creating a new financial burden under the guise of a relief offensive.
In the absence of collective bargaining, payments may stall
A structural deadlock looms over the 2026 rollout. In many industries, active collective bargaining negotiations aren’t happening this year, leaving companies without the traditional framework needed to negotiate and implement such payments.
Both the BDA and the German Trade Union Confederation (DGB) argue the government’s proposed timeframe is too narrow. They’re pushing for a longer window to make the bonus viable, though the current lack of a bargaining framework makes any immediate rollout a logistical gamble.
Why the 2022 inflation bonus won’t be a reliable blueprint
The government seems to be betting on a repeat of the 2022 inflation compensation bonus, but the conditions have shifted. Back then, the measure was a reaction to skyrocketing living costs and enjoyed broad cooperation between employers and unions.
Data from the Federal Statistical Office shows that the previous program was highly effective for those with union protection, who received an average of $2,900 (€2,680) per person. But, that success masked a deep divide: freelancers and the self-employed were completely excluded, and non-unionized workers were largely left behind.
Kampeter expects far fewer companies to participate this time. The political calculation that a tax-free status would be enough to entice employers ignores the reality of tightened budgets and the absence of the social consensus that drove the 2022 payments.
The Taxpayers‘ Federation’s alternative for commuters
Reiner Holznagel, president of the Taxpayers‘ Federation, dismissed the bonus as reality-detached. He argues that a one-time cash injection is a superficial fix for systemic costs.
Holznagel suggests the government should instead increase the commuting allowance. This would provide a sustainable benefit for everyone relying on cars or public transit to reach their jobs, rather than relying on the whims of an employer’s bank account.
Do employees have a legal right to the $1,080 (€1,000) bonus?
No. The measure is designed to allow employers to pay the bonus tax-free, but it does not mandate the payment. The decision to grant the bonus remains entirely voluntary for the company.
Who was excluded from previous relief payments?
Freelancers and self-employed individuals received no payments during the previous cycle. The vast majority of employees without collective bargaining agreements—only 35% of whom received a payment—were effectively sidelined.
