German Industrialist Clashes with Town Over Traffic Calming Measures
The small German municipality of Schwanau in Baden-Württemberg has become the unlikely stage for an escalating conflict between local government and one of the region's largest employers. The...
Wohnungsbau Sentiment Improves Despite Persistent Order Shortages
The mood in Germany's residential construction sector has improved to its highest level in over three years, according to the latest Ifo Institute survey. The business climate index for housing...
Berlin Protesters Challenge Merz With Diversity Rally at Brandenburg Gate
Hundreds of demonstrators gathered at Berlin's Brandenburg Gate on Sunday evening, forming a sea of lights with mobile phone torches and lighters to protest for diversity and against racism....
Knorr-Bremse Acquires Dutch Digital Platform TRAVIS to Expand Commercial Vehicle Services
MUNICH — Knorr-Bremse AG, the German manufacturer of braking systems for trucks and trains, announced on Monday it has agreed to acquire Dutch digital services platform TRAVIS Road Services...
Holcim to Acquire German Building Materials Firm Xella in €1.85 Billion Deal
Swiss cement conglomerate Holcim has agreed to acquire German building materials manufacturer Xella for €1.85 billion, marking a significant strategic move in the European construction sector....

Berlin Aims for 24-Hour Business Registration in Sweeping Digital Overhaul

02-10-2025


The German government has unveiled an ambitious 80-measure plan to create what it calls a "faster, digital and more capable state" that makes decisions more quickly, delivers services more reliably and strengthens public trust. The comprehensive modernization agenda, detailed in a 40-page document obtained by German Press Agency, represents the Merz administration's first major policy initiative five months after taking office and establishing a dedicated Ministry for Digitalization and State Modernization.

Central to the plan are significant cost reductions and efficiency improvements. The government aims to cut bureaucratic costs by 25 percent, representing approximately €16 billion in savings, while reducing federal personnel by eight percent. These measures are designed to address longstanding complaints about Germany's complex administrative procedures and lengthy processing times that have hampered both citizens and businesses.

Key digital initiatives include the centralization of online vehicle registration, which would relieve approximately 400 local and state registration offices from maintaining their own portals, generating substantial savings. For entrepreneurs, the government plans to enable business registration within 24 hours through a centralized web portal. Additionally, a bureaucracy reporting portal will be established where citizens can submit specific improvement suggestions for government services.

The modernization effort also focuses on improving the quality of legislation itself. Ministry staff involved in drafting legal texts will receive specialized training and AI tools to help create more practical, less bureaucratic laws. The government commits to implementing EU law without "bureaucratic over-fulfillment" and will apply the "one-in-one-out" rule more consistently, requiring that any new regulatory burden on businesses must be offset by relief elsewhere. During the cabinet retreat, Chancellor Merz emphasized that the government is doing everything possible to help the German economy regain its footing.