Back to graph

Topic analysis

Germans see little progress on cutting red tape

Most people and businesses in Germany say they've seen little change in bureaucracy despite Chancellor Friedrich Merz's government promises to reduce it. A survey published Saturday said two-thirds of Germans believe  unnecessary bureaucracy  has remained the same since the current government took office.  Some said administrative burdens were even worse, despite a promise made last year by Chancellor Friedrich Merz's incoming government  to slash red tape. The coalition of Merz's conservative Christian Democratic Union (CDU), its Bavarian sister party, the Christian Social Union (CSU) and the center-left Social Democrats (SPD) agreed to "a comprehensive rollback of bureaucracy" in its agreement last April. The poll, conducted by YouGov found 66% of citizens said administrative burdens had remained the same since the current government took office, while 22% reported an increase. Businesses reported limited improvement. Only 4% believed bureaucracy had decreased, with 8% unsure in the poll conducted for the European Center for Digital Competitiveness at the ESCP Business School in Berlin. Among managers surveyed, 63% said bureaucracy had stayed the same, while 31% saw it increase and just 4% reported a decline. About half said they had delayed or canceled projects in the past year due to slow or complex administrative processes. Respondents said the greatest need for digital improvement is in healthcare and local administrative offices, followed by tax services and construction approvals. "People don't want more announcements; they want the state to finally just work," said Philip Meissner, founder of the Center for Digital Competitiveness at ESCP. The center's co-founder Klaus Schweinsberg said the survey results showed that the Merz had "clearly failed" on the core issues for competitiveness: digitization and cutting bureaucracy. Edited by: Jenipher Camino Gonzalez To view this video please enable JavaScript, and consider upgrading to a web browser that supports HTML5 video

Heat score

1

Sources

1

Platforms

1

Relations

57
First seen
Apr 12, 2026, 8:00 PM
Last updated
Apr 12, 2026, 9:05 PM

Why this topic matters

Germans see little progress on cutting red tape is currently shaped by signals from 1 source platforms. This page organizes AI analysis summaries, 1 timeline events, and 57 relationship edges so search engines and AI systems can understand the topic's factual basis and propagation arc.

News

Keywords

10 tags
seelittleprogresscuttingredtapepeoplebusinessessaythey

Source evidence

1 evidence items

Timeline

Germans see little progress on cutting red tape

Apr 12, 2026, 8:00 PM

Related topics

Germany beat Ghana to complete confidence-boosting March

friendly matchlate winnerteam confidenceWorld Cup preparationtactical disciplinesubstitutionsplayer competitionimpact player
Relation score 0.00Open topic

German Chancellor Merz has never been more unpopular

hasneverbeenmoreunpopularmademanypromisesvotersaccording
Relation score 0.90Open topic

Empty churches, new temples: Germany's growing religious diversity

religious diversitydeclining Christianityempty churchesmosque constructionsynagogue expansionHindu templesBuddhist monasteriesOrthodox churchesrepurposed religious buildingsreligious landscape shift
Relation score 0.80Open topic

The German village running on its own juice

renewable energywind turbinesbiogasenergy independencecommunity microgridelectricity costsenergy transitionGermany
Relation score 0.80Open topic

Germany: Mental health patients struggle to get help

psychotherapy waiting listsmental health crisisfee cutspublic healthcaretherapist shortagepatient access
Relation score 0.80Open topic

How to fix Germany's costly health care system

health insurancecost reductioncommission reportstate insurersfinancial shortfallreform proposals
Relation score 0.80Open topic

Debate over German repatriation plans impacts integrated Syrian refugees

SyriaGermanyRepatriationDeportationAsylumIntegrationDentistMigration PolicySkilled LaborRefugees
Relation score 0.70Open topic

International development aid suffers unprecedented 2025 dip, led by Trump gutting USAID

development aidODAbudget cutsdonor rankingsbilateral assistancemultilateral aidUkraine funding
Relation score 0.70Open topic