With the new edition of a "concerted action against price pressure" the Federal Chancellor wants to curb the unrest about the high inflation.

The coalition is on the defensive, despite 9-euro tickets and a fuel discount as part of a 30-billion-euro relief.

Now Scholz, in memory of the most famous social democratic economist and Superminister Schiller, is calling on unions and employers to avert a wage-price spiral like that of the 1970s.

More and more trade unions are announcing that they do not want to accept falling real wages.

An interest rate correction is needed

Schiller had devised the concerted action during the recession in 1967 in order to bring politics, business and trade unions to a coordinated approach at the "social table of reason".

Collective bargaining parties should stabilize employment through wage restraint, the government should stimulate demand through increasing spending, true to the Keynesian idea of ​​fine-tuning the economic cycle.

But the debt-financed stimulus programs not only fueled growth, they also inflated prices.

The SPD refused to abandon the expansive fiscal policy.

The trade unions' consideration turned into double-digit wage requests - the concerted action collapsed due to inflation.

It is all the more surprising that Scholz is now resorting to the failed concert.

The benefit of round tables beyond a non-binding exchange on the current situation is limited.

Usually two team up against the third.

Sometimes politicians help the unions, but mostly the latter join forces with companies against the government to get subsidies.

A courageous interest rate correction is now needed to combat inflation, flanked by a reversal of the expansive financial policy.

Painful adjustments can no longer be avoided, at most alleviated where it is socially necessary.

Only if Scholz succeeds in conveying this message does the new concert have a chance of success.