Germany
Key Facts
| Population | 81,802,000 |
|---|---|
| Collective Bargaining Coverage | 62% |
| Proportion of Employees in Unions | 19% |
| Principal Level of Collective Bargaining |
industry |
| Workplace Representation |
works council |
| Board-level Representation |
yes: state-owned and private companies |
| Company Board Structure |
dualistic |
Trade Union
Only around a fifth of employees in Germany are union members, and union density has fallen sharply since the early 1990s, in part because of a sharp fall in manufacturing employment in Eastern Germany after unification. The vast majority of union members are in the main union confederation, the DGB, but within it individual unions, like IG Metall and Verdi, have considerable autonomy and influence.
more ...Collective Bargaining
Collective bargaining is still primarily conducted at industry level between individual trade unions and employers' organisations. However, the system is under pressure as employer leave or never join employers’ organisations, and the agreements themselves provide for greater flexibility at company level.
more ...Workplace Representation
Works councils provide representation for employees at the workplace and they have substantial powers – extending to an effective right of veto on some issues. Although not formally union bodies, union members normally play a key role within them.
more ...Board-level Representation
Employee representatives have a right to seats on the supervisory board of larger companies – one-third in companies with 500 to 2,000 employees, half in companies with more than 2,000.
more ...European-level Representation
European level representatives are chosen through the works council structure. However, for the European Company, there are rules which guarantee seats to trade union officials and – in the largest companies – representatives of senior management, both on the SNB and at board level.
more ...Health and Safety
In any undertaking with more than 20 employees, safety officers must be appointed by the employer.
more ...Financial Participation
The incidence of employee financial participation in Germany is at an average level internationally. Only one tenth of all companies practice profit-sharing and only 2% have employee share ownership schemes. The concept of employee financial participation has been in and out of public debate in the last decades, with varying intensity. The end of 2005 saw the debate gaining ground, mainly due to political focus. This ended up with the adoption of a new law promoting employee share ownership (the "Mitarbeiterkapitalbeteiligungsgesetz”) in early 2009. The political goal defined in the law is greater employee participation in the success and capital of companies.
more ...Resources
Documents, articles, presentations...

