Poverty among elderly worse in western Germany
September 23, 2019By the end of 2018, 4.15% of people over the age of 65 had to seek state support to get by in the states that made up the former West Germany.
For the six eastern states, including Berlin, the rate was only 2.15%, with the nationwide share of seniors who required state help at 3%.
The Düsseldorf-based Rheinische Post newspaper reported the figures from the German statistics bureau on Monday.
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The inclusion of Berlin — which before reunification in 1989 was split between East and West Germany — in calculations for western Germany makes for an even starker contrast. The German capital has a very high rate of seniors on state support at 6.5%. Including this figure raises the rate for western Germany to 4.36%.
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One explanation for the lower figures out of the eastern states is that women there have traditionally been more active in the labor market. Even nearly 30 years after reunification, women in eastern Germany tend to work more often and longer than women in western Germany. This is reflected in higher pensions.
kp/rc (AFP, epd, KNA)