
Trade unions and employers in Germany have started collective bargaining negotiations for public-sector employees in most federal states with seemingly irreconcilable differences.
The aim is not only to achieve inflation compensation, but also a real wage increase, said Verdi trade union boss Frank Werneke immediately before the start of talks in Berlin on Wednesday.
Verdi and the civil servants' union dbb, is negotiating with the TdL association which represents Germany's federal states.
The unions want a 7% pay increase, or at least €300 8$348) per month, for public-sector employees.
The TdL negotiator, Hamburg's Finance Senator Andreas Dressel, has rejected the demand as too high.
Meanwhile, dbb boss Volker Geyer told dpa: "We are counting on constructive negotiations." But if employers refuse to cooperate and do not submit an offer, pressure will have to be increased.
"Then actions and strikes are conceivable in many areas, for example in road maintenance services, among employees of the state police forces, university hospitals or in financial administration," said Geyer.
Three rounds of negotiations are planned with the the third scheduled for February 11-13 in Potsdam.
According to Verdi, about 925,000 public-sector employees and 1.3 million civil servants are affected.
LATEST POSTS
- 1
It's official: NASA's Artemis 2 moon mission will break humanity's all-time distance record - 2
Roman around the Christmas tree | Space photo of the day for Dec. 25, 2025 - 3
Find Your Internal Culinary expert: Cooking Strategies and Recipes - 4
Italy Brings In New Measures In 2026 To Tackle Overtourism - 5
Down to earth Manual for A Modest Hyundai Ioniq Electric for Seniors
Satellite data reveals a huge solar storm in 2024 shrank Earth's protective plasma shield
Share your pick for the miniature headphones that you generally suggest!
How Google, Microsoft, Walmart, and other corporate giants are preparing for an aging workforce
Figure out How to Augment Your Rooftop Substitution Speculation
Watch Atlas V rocket launch its heaviest-ever payload early on April 4
Flu season is just beginning, but doctors are already on high alert
Vote In favor of Your Favored Language Learning Applications
Lego's $650 Pokémon set is already sold out as demand, preorders surge
Optimal Beauty Parlor Medicines for Upgraded Wellbeing and Appearance












