Business | Generous benefits

Germans are world champions of calling in sick

It’s easy and it pays well

An eagle sweating in his bed with a sign showing a red downward arrow attached to the end of the bedframe
Illustration: Nishant Choksi
|BERLIN

Historically Germany has been a world champion of the rights of workers related to their health. In 1883 Otto von Bismarck, chancellor of the German empire, set up the world’s first statutory health-insurance system with the Health Insurance Act, which included paid sick leave. Bismarck’s Krankenversicherungsgesetz was not motivated by concern for workers’ welfare so much as a strategy to beat socialists at their own game. Yet it laid the foundations of Germany’s welfare state and was followed by laws on accident and disability insurance.

Explore more

This article appeared in the Business section of the print edition under the headline “Champions of sick leave”

From the January 25th 2025 edition

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

Explore the edition

More from Business

The illustration shows a man and a woman standing on separate stacks of coins.

Knowing what your colleagues earn

The pros and cons of greater pay transparency

Sam Altman, chief executive of OpenAI, Masayoshi Son, SoftBank Group CEO, and Larry Ellison, chairman of Oracle Corporation and chief technology officer, listen as President Donald trump speaks during a press conference at the White House.

A $500bn investment plan says a lot about Trump’s AI priorities

It’s build, baby, build


A surreal scene with a striped bowl holding the Statue of Liberty's torch, surrounded by floating, distorted faces and small planets.

Donald Trump’s America will not become a tech oligarchy

Reasons not to panic about the tech-industrial complex


OpenAI’s latest model will change the economics of software

The more reasoning it does, the more computer power it uses

Donald Trump once tried to ban TikTok. Now can he save it?

To keep the app alive in America, he must persuade China to sell up

The UFC, Dana White and the rise of bloodsport entertainment

There is more to the mixed-martial-arts impresario than his friendship with Donald Trump