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PoliticsGermany

The secret to Germany's thrifty elections

Ian Bateson | Mark Hallam
August 9, 2021

Tax money, no limits on donations and somehow campaigns that are much cheaper than in many other countries — DW examines how German parties get their money.  

https://p.dw.com/p/3ykTh
A campaign poster on a Berlin street for the satirical German political party "Die Partei" in 2013
Image: Michael Sohn/AP/picture alliance

Compared with the United States, the price tag for German elections is pretty cheap. 

While American candidates running for Congress or the White House spent a record-breaking $14.4 billion (€12.24 billion) on last year's election, according to the nonpartisan Center for Responsive Politics, political parties in Germany spend a fraction of that. 

 In 2017, the last time Germany held a parliamentary election, parties spent €92 million ($109.6 million) combined on their election campaigns, according to the Federal Statistical Office. In both countries the cost of campaigns has been rising in recent years as the battle for votes moves increasingly online and higher production values become the norm for party conferences and election events. But Germany is still a long way off from the level of spending in the US.

The secret to Germany's thrifty elections lies in state funding for major parties and the country's strict party financing laws.

Where do German political parties get their money?

How are political campaigns financed in Germany?

Unlike in the United States and other countries, there is no distinction in Germany between campaign funds and political party funds. Campaigning is considered part of the normal duties of a political party and is therefore included in the party's total budget. 

German taxes provide support for political parties — in 2021 that support totaled €200 million — with that money also funding election campaigns.

DW Infographic: How Germany's political parties are financed

Who gives the parties money?

Taxpayers, party members and corporate and individual donors provide political parties with the vast majority of their nonstate funds.

Political parties and their campaigns are financed through a pot of money that includes federal government support, party membership fees and donations from corporations and individuals. All major political parties in Germany receive funding from the federal government, but the amount they receive depends on how well each party fares in elections on the state, federal and EU levels.

Parties are eligible for public funding if they manage to snag at least 1% of the vote at the state level or 0.5% of the vote in either the EU or national elections.

The government then gives each party €1.06 for the first 4 million votes and 87 cents for every vote after. Each party also receives 45 cents for every euro the party raises through membership fees as well as from private donations up to €3,300.

DW Infographic: Political party spending in Germany

How much can someone donate to a party?

In Germany, like the speed limit on the Autobahn, there is no limit to how large donations from corporations or from individuals can be. There's also no limit to how much the parties are allowed to spend on election campaigns.

Despite the sky's-the-limit approach to contributions, private donations usually only make up a fraction of each party's budget.

One of the main requirements is that all donations over €50,000 must be reported to the Bundestag. The parliament then posts a list of the donations on its website, including the names and addresses of the companies or people who donated.

The largest donation in  2021 came from a software developer and cryptocurrency investor. He donated €1 million to the Greens.

DW Infographic: Caps on state funding of political parties

Why are campaign costs so low?

German political parties spend a lot less on advertising than parties in the United States, where inundating voters with phone calls, emails and attack ads on television for months on end has become the expensive norm.

Local and state laws in Germany allow parties to put up campaign billboards and posters starting only a few weeks before the election. These state laws also limit the length and duration of radio and TV ads to one month before the election, shortening the length of the campaign. 

While you're here: Every Tuesday, DW editors round up what is happening in German politics and society, with an eye toward understanding this year’s elections and beyond. You can sign up here for the weekly email newsletter Berlin Briefing, to stay on top of developments as Germany enters the post-Merkel era.

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Mark Hallam News and current affairs writer and editor with DW since 2006.@marks_hallam