Since
German reunification German prosperity has declined compared to pre-unification West German levels, and the German unemployment rate reached record levels: 12.6% (according to national definition) as of March 2, 2005, the highest rate since World War II. The failure of the German model to maintain standards of high performance has led experts to speculate about its demise, despite having been adopted successfully in other countries' corporations since its peak. Others see the relative decline as an unavoidable consequence of integrating the much less advanced GDR economy and 17 million new citizens, which necessitated a transfer of over 1.3 trillion Euros from west to east as of 2009. Much of the political discourse regarding reforms in recent years revolved around the question of how to modify the German model (and the political conditions forming its framework) to sustain it in a globalised economy. Ex-Chancellor
Gerhard Schröder's reforms, called "
Agenda 2010", made some steps towards such a goal, but also brought with them much controversy. Nonetheless, after years of 'painful' reforms, the German economy seems to have got back on track; however, the
wage share measured as
compensation of employees as percentage of
gross national income, was declining in Germany since the 1980s. Unemployment has fallen below 10% (according to national definition) for the first time in years and economic growth reached 2.7% in 2006. In June 2016, the unemployment rate was reported as 5.9% by the German Federal Employment Agency (
Bundesagentur für Arbeit). The unemployment rate was reported for August 2025 as a percentage of the civilian labour force for Germany as a whole 6.4%. It ranged between 4.2% in Bavaria and 11.8% in the state of Bremen. == Counter-argument: rise of the German model ==