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Germany's €49 transport ticket gets green light in Bundestag

March 16, 2023

The battle over a national €49 monthly bus and tram ticket has cleared another hurdle. After winning approval in the Bundestag it now moves to the Bundesrat for a final vote at the end of the month.

https://p.dw.com/p/4OoQw
Three four people waiting at a train platform, two with bicycles, as a regional train passes by
Reduced-rate bus and train tickets have proven popular in car-loving Germany Image: Sebastian Kahnert/dpa/picture alliance

German parliamentarians on Thursday voted to approve plans to introduce a €49 public transport ticket. The vote primarily dealt with the issue of financing the plan, which is set to go on offer on May 1.

Accordingly, the federal government will spend €1.5 billion ($1.6 billion) annually in the years 2023-2025. Beyond that, it will cover half the cost of introducing the scheme over the course of this year. Financing beyond 2025 is to be dealt with later.

Thursday's vote saw discussion about the general development of pricing for the initiative, with the €49 ($52) monthly cost set by politicians specifically declared as an introductory price that may be raised at a later date.

The €49 monthly ticket will be valid for all local train and bus transportation in Germany and comes on the heel of the summer's  extremely popular €9 ticket, which covered the local travel in June, July and August.

Federal Transportation Minister Volker Wissing of the governing coalition's Free Democratic Party (FDP) took to Twitter to laud the move, writing: "The Germany ticket is on the way. The largest public transportation reform in German history."

An information screen displays an ad for the so-called 49 Euro, or Germany ticket
Anywhere in the country for 49 euros? In neighboring Luxembourg public transport is freeImage: Christian Ohde/CHROMORANGE/picture alliance

€49 ticket: Breakthrough or boondoggle?

"Millions of people will profit from this decision," gushed Dirk Flege, executive director of Alliance pro-Schiene (Pro-Rail Alliance), a rail use promoting transport association consisting of non-profits and railway sector companies.

Flege called the so-called Germany ticket "a real breakthrough" in what he otherwise described as "gloomy times for public transport."

Members of Berlin's governing coalition of SPD, Greens and FDP voted in favor of the ticket. Opposition Union parties (CDU/CSU) and the far-right AfD voted against the plan. The Left Party abstained from the vote.

Those voting against the bill pointed to concerns about the ultimate cost of the program and the negative impact it might have on financing the expansion and improvement of transportation infrastructure.

CDU/CSU transportation spokesman Thomas Bareiss scoffed at the Germany ticket, calling it a "government-ordered rebate that will cost taxpayers a pretty penny." Bareiss called the coalition's financing plan "unserious and unsustainable," saying the money would be sorely missed for other projects later.

Bareiss went on to warn, "Public transport service won't be improved, in some regions it may even get worse."

A regional train in Germany departs a railway station
Germany's rail infrastructure is crumbling and critics say money would be better spent on maintenance and repairsImage: Arne Dedert/dpa/picture alliance

Germany's rails in a dire state

Reinhard Sager, president of the Association of German Counties (Deutscher Landkreistag), complained to Funke Media Group that the ticket does nothing to address "core problems facing a future-oriented and attractive public transportation system."

Low ticket prices alone, he said, cannot replace inadequate [transportation] supply.

A recent internal report by the Deutsche Bahn (DB), Germany's national rail service provider, found that much of its 33,000-kilometer (20,505-mile) infrastructure was in a poor state. The company says it needs around €89 billion for repairs and maintenance.

On Tuesday, Germany's Federal Audit Office confirmed that DB was in a state of permanent crisis. The office went on to criticize the federal government, which owns DB, saying "the government is far from resolving the problems" DB faces.

The Bundestag's €49 ticket bill will now go to the Bundesrat — the legislative body representing Germany's 16 states — for a vote on March 31, where it is expected to pass.

Is Germany's €9-ticket a gimmick or a role model?

While you're here: Every Tuesday, DW editors round up what is happening in German politics and society. You can sign up here for the weekly email newsletter Berlin Briefing.

js/sms (AFP, dpa)