Of course it is not trivial at all, if you consider voting power (-> cannot cut tax money going into pensions) and legal limitations (-> cannot cut Bürgergeld/Grundsicherung by much, as it is not allowed to go below the Existenzminimum (minimal amount of money required to sustain a citizen)). Especially if you are looking at the real requirements (military, infrastructure, etc.) going by the tune of trillions.
And again, German debt levels are way lower than any other G7 country's. So there is no excuse.
>Of course it is not trivial at all, if you consider voting power
Indeed. I think you figured out the issue. Politicians aren't elected to fix infrastructure, but to distribute taxes through the social security system.
Hard to blame politicians for wanting to get elected again, though. This is a systemic issue with democracy. And even an approach with more direct democracy (in contrast to the indirect, parliamentarian democracy) shows that there are issues with denial of reality on the voters side (see for example the recent Swiss vote for the 13th month pension).
"A democracy cannot exist as a permanent form of government. It can only exist until the majority discovers it can vote itself largess out of the public treasury."
And yet the social democrats have infamously implemented reforms that drastically cut back on worker's rights and social welfare.
The reason the government can't go below the Existenzminimum is that this would be a violation of the constitution's guarantee of human dignity according to the federal constitutional court of Germany, not because it would annoy the poors.
Also there is documented corruption in almost all political parties in federal politics. Most of that corruption is legal though but the beneficiaries are decidedly not the recipients of the "social security system" but rather of public-private partnerships and subsidies.
If you think the poor are leeching off society then the same goes for the fossil fuel industry, the agricultural industry, car manufacturing and other industries that are heavily subsidised and benefiting for extremely specific tax exemptions and funding programmes. One of the biggest beneficiaries of the COVID relief programs in Germany unlike the US was not ordinary taxpayers but airlines and large manufacturing companies.
>car manufacturing and other industries that are heavily subsidised
Any evidence that BMW, Mercedes and VW aren't massive net tax payers?
I had this conversation before, where someone claimed that e.g. the automotive industry was heavily subsidized. But when I looked into it I found absolutely no evidence.
The German government is directly supported by the massively successful German industry. It is the sole reason Germany can even afford it's welfare state. On it's face it is absurd to claim that that industry is tax payer supported, completely ridiculous.
>If you think the poor are leeching off society then the same goes for the fossil fuel industry, the agricultural industry, car manufacturing and other industries
Social security is the top expenditure point in the budget.
Social security is infrastructure. What do you think infrastructure exists for? Cars and electric signals don't get to vote. And Germany still has an appalling amount of childhood poverty nevertheless.
It would indeed be trivial to "find the money" but the neo-liberal FDP is acting as an internal opposition demanding both strict adherence to the self-imposed debt brake (which was put in place to allow for investment during economic downturns by avoiding unnecessary debt when things are going well -- except everyone promptly forgot about that justification) as well as neither enacting new taxes (e.g. additional tax brackets), raising existing taxes nor resuming the very moderate wealth tax we suspended (not abolished!) years ago for no good reason.
They neglect infrastructure to focus on social security.
If they wanted to find the money, they trivially could.
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