Small municipalities like Kitzingen and Rauschenberg are already struggling to staff daycare centres, even as a new study projects the nation’s overall worker gap will reach 4.3 million by 2036 — 1.3 million more than previously estimated in 2024. The Institute of the German Economy (IW), which produced the forecast, warns that the current legislative term represents the last window to cushion the retirement wave of the baby-boomer generation.
The IW researchers point to two main drivers behind the accelerating deficit: an ageing population and declining immigration. The potential labour force is set to shrink to 51.2 million people by 2036, a drop of 6.9 percent. Germany’s appeal to skilled foreign workers has also faded, while persistently low birth rates compound the long-term strain. Looking further ahead, the IW projects the total population will fall to 81.1 million by 2045, a decline of 2.9 percent from today.
In the meantime, the current economic slump is adding short-term pressure. Germany’s central bank, the Bundesbank, has downgraded its 2026 growth forecast from 0.6 to 0.5 percent, citing the consequences of the Iran war, which is driving up energy costs and eroding purchasing power. Inflation is expected to stay at 2.9 percent next year before easing to 2.7 percent in 2027 and 1.9 percent in 2028. Employment is set to dip slightly in 2026 and only recover from mid-2027 onward. Sectors such as retail, construction and hospitality are seeing job vacancies remain unfilled for unusually long periods.
Local authorities are already feeling the crunch. On 12 June, psychiatric hospitals in Lower Saxony warned of care bottlenecks caused by austerity measures and bureaucratic penalties. The district of Würzburg faces deficits in the millions because state funds for migration, youth welfare and clinic participation fall short. Daycare centres in places like Kitzingen and Rauschenberg are desperately recruiting staff to meet legal requirements and educational support needs.
Some healthcare providers are trying flexible models to ease the crisis. In June 2026, the Asklepios hospital chain launches the pilot project “SAT Travel Nurse Sylt”, which allows nurses from Hamburg to work at the North Sea clinic for periods ranging from four weeks to six months. Incentives include free accommodation, reimbursed travel costs, a monthly allowance of 350 euros and an additional 80-euro function allowance. The aim is to make nursing more attractive — a pressing need given that despite rising training numbers, dropout rates remain high.
Last year, around 64,300 people began the generalist nursing training programme, an eight percent increase from the previous year. But of the cohort that started in 2020, only 40 percent had earned a qualification by the end, according to the Verdi trade union. The Federal Institute for Vocational Education and Training (BIBB) identifies “Praxissschock” — the shock of real-world working conditions — as the main reason for early dropouts. That issue is also on the agenda for the Hauptstadtkongress on 23 June 2026.








