German pension commission proposes shift to Swedish-style fund


German Chancellor Friedrich Merz, Labour Minister Baerbel Bas, Constanze Janda, and Frank-Jurgen Weise pose at a press conference on the day they present the Pension Security Commission (Alterssicherungskommission) report, at the Chancellery in Berlin, Germany, June 23, 2026. REUTERS/Nadja Wohlleben

BERLIN, June 23 (Reuters) - A German ⁠pension commission appointed by Chancellor Friedrich Merz proposed gradually raising the country's ⁠retirement age and introducing a Swedish-style pension fund as part of ‌pension reforms to tackle an ageing population.

The commission's report, presented on Tuesday, called for establishing a fund modelled on the Swedish pension system, with mandatory contributions by workers and employers that would be ​invested in financial assets to pay future pensions.

"The aim ⁠is to strengthen the state ⁠pension by introducing an additional, compulsory, individually allocated funded pension," Merz told a news ⁠conference ‌to present the report, which will be debated by the coalition government.

Germany's current system, in which the pensions of retirees are paid for by ⁠employees' contributions into the system, has faced increasing problems ​as the population ages ‌and the proportion of workers to retirees shrinks.

Merz said the change would ⁠ensure contributions remained ​manageable and that younger workers would be able to count on a secure pension in future.

The report also proposed to abolish the option of retiring early at the age ⁠of 63, without deductions as well as incremental increases ​in the retirement age, according to life expectancy, rising to 70 by the early 2090s. Currently, the retirement age is set to reach 67 by the early 2030s.

The ⁠report, expected to provide the basis for the government's pension reform, came as Merz's struggling coalition pushes to agree a package of tax and welfare reforms before parliament breaks for its summer recess next month.

Calls to shift the pension system from ​the current model funded directly by contributions to one ⁠that includes funding from capital markets have been made for years as Germany's demographic ​change has accelerated.

But reform proposals have repeatedly been ‌stymied by political differences and by tensions ​between the interests of current pensioners and those of younger workers still paying contributions into the system.

(Reporting by James Mackenzie; Editing by Susan Fenton)

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