Germans worried about economic malaise ahead of election, survey

By Maria Martinez

BERLIN (Reuters) – Most Germans are worried about the economy and high prices as Europe’s biggest economy, once the region’s economic engine, now contracts, a survey showed on Monday ahead of a February 23 election.

The online survey by German reinsurer R&V of 1,000 Germans from January 23-25 showed that 70% worry about the rising cost of living, up from 57% in the previous survey in summer.

“Inflation may have dropped, but the absolute prices have remained high,” said Isabelle Borucki from Philipps University of Marburg, an adviser in the study.

Of the respondents, 68% fear an economic downturn, up from 48% in the previous survey.

Increasing competition from abroad, high energy costs, elevated interest rates and uncertain economic prospects have taken their toll on the Germany economy, which contracted in 2024 for two years in a row and has become one of the top concerns among voters.

The election was called after Chancellor Olaf Scholz’s three-way coalition with the Greens and the Free Democrats collapsed in November. He now leads a minority government with just his Social Democrats and the Greens.

Disagreements over how to save Europe’s largest economy contributed to the coalition’s demise, with the dire situation reflected in the country’s storied auto industry, with Volkswagen and others cutting jobs as they look to remain afloat.

More than six out of 10 people in Germany consider politicians in both the government and the opposition to be overwhelmed by their tasks.

“Germans’ trust in politicians is frighteningly low,” said study director Grischa Brower-Rabinowitsch. “Many people no longer feel represented, political debates often seem out of touch with reality and driven by party political calculation.”

Three out of four Germans are worried about the polarisation of society, up from 48% in the summer. The sharp increase is attributed to a series of high-profile killings in public spaces by people with an immigrant background and how the parties reacted to them, the director of the study said.

Migration is interpreted as the central political problem, Brower-Rabinowitsch said. “This builds up enemy images that can lead to further division.”

(Reporting by Maria Martinez and Klaus Lauer, Editing by Miranda Murray and Michael Perry)

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