30-November-2022
English
The OECD’s annual Revenue Statistics report found that the tax-to-GDP ratio in Germany increased by 1.6 percentage points from 37.9% in 2020 to 39.5% in 2021. Between 2020 and 2021, the OECD average increased from 33.6% to 34.1%.
21-December-2021
English
15-September-2021
English
7-July-2021
English
In some countries, employers used job retention programmes to cut hours while allowing workers to keep their pay and jobs; there, it is likely that the full impact of the pandemic is yet to be felt. In other countries, there have been unprecedented increases in unemployment, but many workers will return to their jobs (or to new ones) as economies re-open and activity picks up.
9-June-2021
English
19-May-2021
English, PDF, 222kb
Deutschland verzeichnet eines der höchsten Level von Alkoholkonsum – 12.9 Liter reinen Alkohol pro Kopf und Jahr. Dies entspricht ungefähr 2,6 Flaschen Wein oder 5 Liter Bier pro Woche pro Person über 15 Jahren. Zudem sind in Deutschland einige Bevölkerungsgruppen einem höheren Risiko ausgesetzt.
19-May-2021
English, PDF, 176kb
Germany has one of the highest levels of alcohol consumption – 12.9 litres of pure alcohol per capita per year, roughly equivalent to 2.6 bottles of wine or 5 litres of beer per week per person aged 15 and over. In addition, in Germany, some population groups are at higher risk than others.
20-August-2020
English
Biographical note of Germany's Permanent Representative to the OECD.
24-June-2020
English, PDF, 764kb
This note provides a comprehensive overview of the extent to which laws in Germany and OECD countries ensure equal treatment of LGBTI people, and of the complementary policies that could help foster LGBTI inclusion.
10-October-2019
English, PDF, 269kb
Just under one in four adults in Germany are obese. As a result, Germans live on average 2.6 years less due to overweight. Overweight accounts for 10.7% of health expenditure one of the largest rates of all countries analysed. Labour market outputs are lower due to overweight by the equivalent of 1 m full time workers per year. Combined, this means that overweight reduces Germany’s GDP by 3.0%.