Germany's welfare expenditure just crossed a telling threshold – over 30% of the entire economy now funnels into social programs. That's not just a number on a chart. It signals something deeper: a system where incentives have warped and costs spiral without clear boundaries. When nearly a third of economic output gets redirected to welfare mechanisms, you're looking at structural issues that go beyond simple budget line items. The real question isn't whether people deserve support – it's whether this model can sustain itself when the ratio keeps climbing.
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StakeHouseDirector
· 12-01 14:51
30%? This ratio is still far from the skyline; Germany is really trying to kill the economy.
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ThesisInvestor
· 12-01 14:49
Germany's welfare spending accounts for more than 30%... In other words, the system has started to bleed.
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SingleForYears
· 12-01 14:47
30%? This ratio is really outrageous, feels like raising an increasingly large machine.
Germany's welfare expenditure just crossed a telling threshold – over 30% of the entire economy now funnels into social programs. That's not just a number on a chart. It signals something deeper: a system where incentives have warped and costs spiral without clear boundaries. When nearly a third of economic output gets redirected to welfare mechanisms, you're looking at structural issues that go beyond simple budget line items. The real question isn't whether people deserve support – it's whether this model can sustain itself when the ratio keeps climbing.