Briefing | Schafft Deutschland das?

Germany is facing dramatic change in many dimensions all at once

It will not be easy to handle

|BERLIN

Much of germany’s success in recent decades can be put down to staying the course. Even its dramas were dramas of continuity—as when, in 2015, Angela Merkel refused to change the country’s asylum policy in the face of a huge influx of Syrian refugees. “Wir schaffen das,” she said as she held open the door—”We can handle this.” The much-quoted remark projected compassion and confidence while offering voters astute reassurance. Germany was strong and stable enough to cope with this extraordinary development. There would be readjustments, but no deep changes, nor serious costs.

This article appeared in the Briefing section of the print edition under the headline “Schafft Deutschland das?”

The new Germany

From the August 13th 2022 edition

Discover stories from this section and more in the list of contents

Explore the edition

More from Briefing

A lawyer who specialises in shipping and maritime law.

Even in India, bureaucracy is being curtailed

Many small steps could make a big difference

An illustration shows a carpenter, a surgeon, and a business person—representing the infrastructure, healthcare, and finance sectors—using a handsaw, scalpel, and scissors to cut through stubborn red tape..

Many governments talk about cutting regulation but few manage to

Yet radical deregulation is often a big boost to growth


Why Chinese AI has stunned the world

DeepSeek’s models are much cheaper and almost as good as American rivals


The right in Congress and the courts will reshape Donald Trump’s agenda

As dominant as the new president is, there is still life in Washington’s institutions

How far will Donald Trump go to get rid of illegal immigrants?

It is his signature policy, but the obstacles are daunting

Young customers in developing countries propel a boom in plastic surgery

Falling costs and converging beauty standards spur new habits