The high inflation leads to a significant decline in real wages in Germany.

Wages increased significantly in the first quarter by 4.0 percent compared to the same period last year, as the Federal Statistical Office announced on Monday.

However, consumer prices increased even more strongly in the same period at 5.8 percent.

This results in a real, price-adjusted drop in earnings of 1.8 percent.

"Inflation thus more than consumed the rise in nominal wages in the first quarter of 2022," the statisticians summarized the results.

As a result, many employees have less purchasing power.

The Institute for Macroeconomics and Business Cycle Research (IMK), which is close to the trade unions, assumes that the real wage losses will continue at least until the end of the year.

"In the coming year, a turnaround is possible," said the scientific director of the IMK, Sebastian Dullien, the news agency Reuters.

"However, even then, not all real wage losses resulting from the high inflation in 2022 should be made up immediately." It is therefore important that politicians with targeted relief packages help to stabilize the purchasing power of private households.

Although the previous relief packages should noticeably relieve many households of the additional burden of more expensive energy for the current year, some households such as those of pensioners and students have been left out.

"Also, the relief doesn't yet cover the increased food prices," Dullien said.

"Since real wages in 2023 are likely to be below the level of 2021, further one-off government payments are also necessary for the coming year."

Collective wages are also increasing noticeably

Agreed wages also rose by an average of 4 percent in the first quarter.

This includes collectively agreed basic salaries and special payments determined by collective bargaining agreements.

The increase in the areas of “education and teaching” (plus 5.0 percent), “agriculture and forestry;

Fisheries" (plus 4.9 percent) and "Public administration, defence; social security" (plus 4.6 percent). In these areas, the corona premiums were particularly noticeable, which both public employees in the federal states and most state and local civil servants also received the above-average wage development in the manufacturing sector of 4.8 percent can primarily be attributed to special payments, especially in the metal and electrical industry.

Below-average growth in negotiated wages, including special payments, was particularly evident in energy supply (plus 0.7 percent), financial and insurance services (plus 1.3 percent) and water supply and waste disposal (plus 1.9 percent).

(Report by Rene Wagner. Edited by Hans Seidenstücker. If you have any questions, please contact our editorial team at berlin.newsroom@thomsonreuters.com)