German County’s Work-For-Benefits Pilot Draws Few Takers as National Welfare Deficit Mounts
06.06.2026 - 02:13:14 | boerse-global.de
Only one in four assigned participants actually showed up. In the Thuringian district of Nordhausen, a pilot program compelling young welfare recipients to take one-euro jobs produced a turnout that might seem like a failure — eight out of thirty summoned. Yet the local administration calls it a success. Six of the initially contacted people found regular employment, and the district’s overall unemployment fell 7.3 percent over the period, with youth joblessness dropping 17 percent.
The experiment has become a flashpoint in Germany’s broader struggle over Bürgergeld, the basic-income-style welfare benefit. District administrator Matthias Jendricke (SPD) is now pushing for a nationwide work mandate for all employable recipients, enforced by a new uniformed compliance service. His criticism reaches well beyond his own county: Jendricke accuses federal party leadership and Labour Minister Bärbel Bas of designing social policy primarily for transfer recipients while neglecting the working middle class, and demands a tougher crackdown on welfare fraud.
The push for stricter rules is unfolding against a deteriorating fiscal picture. The Federal Employment Agency expects a deficit exceeding €8 billion in 2026; by year-end, accumulated debt could hit nearly €10 billion, with forecasts pointing to a cumulative funding gap of €23 billion by 2030. Spending on unemployment benefits rose 17 percent in the first four months of 2025 compared with the same period last year, reaching €10.2 billion. The agency projects an average of 2.98 million jobless people in 2026.
In Nordhausen, the numbers that drive Jendricke’s argument are stark. Out of 100 identified work-capable individuals with no disqualifying obstacles, 60 were contacted. Of those, 30 received a one-euro job assignment. Only eight reported for duty. Sanctions ranging from 10 to 30 percent were imposed on 26 people; eight had their benefits cut entirely. A former employee of the Bremen job centre recently backed the critique, alleging systemic flaws and false declarations about household units.
But the proposed tightening of the Social Code II has drawn fierce opposition. A coalition of 38 organisations — including the German Children's Fund — sent an open letter to the federal government earlier this year, warning that stricter rules, particularly on housing costs, could hit families and children hard. Separately, the work requirement for refugees, expanded in a February 2024 reform that gave municipalities more leeway, remains contentious. Critics point to constitutional concerns, heavy administrative burdens, and doubts that compulsory work assignments actually help integration.
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