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Germany's 2026 economic growth to get boost from extra working days

Published by Global Banking & Finance Review

Posted on December 9, 2025

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· Last updated: January 20, 2026

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Germany's 2026 economic growth to get boost from extra working days
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By Rene Wagner and Maria Martinez BERLIN, Dec 9 (Reuters) - Germany's economy is set for a calendar-related boost in 2026, as a slight increase in the number of working days is projected to boost

Germany's 2026 Economic Growth to Benefit from More Workdays

By ‌Rene Wagner and Maria Martinez

BERLIN, Dec 9 (Reuters) - Germany's economy is ‍set for ‌a calendar-related boost in 2026, as a slight increase in the ⁠number of working days ‌is projected to boost growth by about a third, in a welcome development after two years of contraction.

Germans face a longer working year in 2026, ⁠putting in an average of 250.5 days on the job nationwide, 2.4 days ​more than this year and the highest figure ‌since 2022, the country's statistics ⁠office said on Tuesday.

The increase is primarily due to several public holidays falling on weekends in 2026, the office said. 

This matters ​as each additional working day typically contributes around 0.1 percentage points to gross domestic product, statistics show. 

ING forecasts an additional 0.2 to 0.3 percentage points of growth next year due to the ​working ‍day effect.

Growth next year ​will be driven primarily by the government's investment package and more working days, said Carsten Brzeski, global head of macro at ING. 

"For doubters, this is still too little and confirmation that the 'organic' upturn remains weak," Brzeski said. "For optimists, it is at least a start. ⁠When you haven't seen any economic growth for years, you take whatever you can get."

  The German ​Economic Institute IW forecasts Germany's real gross domestic product will expand by 0.1% this year after two years of contraction, before gaining 0.9% next year.

One-third of this growth in ‌2026 will be due to the calendar effect, the institute forecast.

(Reporting by Rene Wagner, writing by Maria Martinez; Editing by Sharon Singleton)

Key Takeaways

  • Germany's economy will benefit from more working days in 2026.
  • The increase in working days is due to holidays falling on weekends.
  • Each additional working day contributes 0.1% to GDP.
  • ING forecasts a 0.2-0.3% GDP growth from the working day effect.
  • The German Economic Institute predicts a 0.9% GDP growth in 2026.

Frequently Asked Questions

What are working days?
Working days refer to the days of the week when employees are expected to work, typically excluding weekends and public holidays. The number of working days can impact overall economic productivity.
What is economic growth?
Economic growth is the increase in the production of goods and services in an economy over a period of time, usually measured as the percentage increase in real GDP.
What is the role of public holidays in economic productivity?
Public holidays can affect economic productivity by reducing the number of available working days, which can impact overall output and GDP growth.

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