Public Debt per Capita Exceeds 30,000 Euros for the First Time
11 Articles
11 Articles
Munich is heading for a decline of 7.5 billion euros at the end of the year. Why is the debt rising despite high revenues, and who is responsible for the misery?
The public debt burden continues to grow. Per capita debt has exceeded the €30,000 mark for the first time.
Germany is in debt, down to the population, with more than 30,000 euros per inhabitant. The debt level in Bremen, Berlin and Hamburg is particularly high – Bavaria and Saxony remain the most economical.
Last year, the per capita debt in Germany increased by 30,000 euros for the first time.


The debt and the lack of billions in the federal budget are at a dizzying level. The government will have to decide on tough social reforms, but it will not be a new edition of Agenda 2010.
Germany's public debt is growing unstoppably: at the end of 2024, a hole of over 2,500 billion euros – a gigantic per-capita debt. But where is it worst? This post Debt reaching record level The per-capita debt exploded was published on Young Freedom.
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