The German Council of Economic Experts (German: ') is a group of economists set up in 1963 to evaluate economic policies of the German government. In the media, the council is often referred to as the "Five Sages of Economy" (Fünf Wirtschaftsweisen), or simply the "Five Sages" (Fünf Weisen).
Role
Every year the Council prepares an annual report which is published before or by November 15. The federal government has to publish its comments and conclusions within eight weeks of the publication of the annual report.
The CouncilâÂÂs secretariat is based at the Federal Statistical Office of Germany in Wiesbaden.
Membership
Composition
The Council has five members which â based on the recommendation of the Federal Minister for Economic Affairs and Energy â are nominated by the federal government and appointed by the President of Germany for a term of five years. Every membership expires on 1 March of the termâÂÂs final year. Traditionally, the Joint Committee of German Associations in Trade and Industry â including the Confederation of German Employers' Associations and 14 other leading business associations â and the countryâÂÂs trade unions each nominate one member of the Council.
Current members
Former members
(in chronological order)
- Wilhelm Bauer (January 1964âÂÂJuly 1974; chairman: March 1964âÂÂFebruary 1970)
- Paul Binder (January 1964âÂÂFebruary 1968)
- Herbert Giersch (January 1964âÂÂFebruary 1970)
- Harald Koch (January 1964âÂÂMay 1969)
- Fritz W. Meyer (January 1964âÂÂFebruary 1966)
- Wolfgang Stützel (February 1966âÂÂSeptember 1968)
- Manfred Schäfer (March 1968âÂÂJuly 1970)
- Norbert Kloten (June 1969âÂÂApril 1976; chairman: March 1970âÂÂFebruary 1976)
- Claus Köhler (December 1969âÂÂFebruary 1974)
- Olaf Sievert (May 1970âÂÂFebruary 1985; chairman: March 1976âÂÂFebruary 1985)
- Armin Gutowski (December 1970âÂÂFebruary 1978)
- Gerhard Scherhorn (May 1974âÂÂFebruary 1979)
- Kurt Schmidt (August 1974âÂÂMay 1984)
- Gerhard Fels (June 1976âÂÂFebruary 1982)
- Horst Albach (May 1978âÂÂFebruary 1983)
- Werner Glastetter (August 1979âÂÂAugust 1981)
- Hans-Jürgen Krupp (March 1982âÂÂFebruary 1984)
- Hans Karl Schneider (July 1982âÂÂFebruary 1992; chairman: March 1985âÂÂFebruary 1992)
- Ernst Helmstädter (March 1983âÂÂFebruary 1988)
- Dieter Mertens (March 1984âÂÂFebruary 1986)
- Dieter Pohmer (July 1984âÂÂFebruary 1991)
- Helmut Hesse (March 1985âÂÂNovember 1988)
- Rüdiger Pohl (July 1986âÂÂFebruary 1994)
- Otmar Issing (April 1988âÂÂSeptember 1990)
- Herbert Hax (March 1989âÂÂFebruary 2000; chairman: March 1992âÂÂFebruary 2000)
- Horst Siebert (January 1991âÂÂFebruary 2003)
- Rolf Peffekoven (April 1991âÂÂFebruary 2001)
- Juergen B. Donges (April 1992âÂÂFebruary 2002; chairman: March 2000âÂÂFebruary 2002)
- Wolfgang Franz (May 1994âÂÂFebruary 1999; March 2003âÂÂFebruary 2013; chairman: March 2009âÂÂFebruary 2013)
- Jürgen Kromphardt (March 1999âÂÂFebruary 2004)
- Bert Rürup (March 2000âÂÂFebruary 2009, chairman: March 2005âÂÂFebruary 2009)
- Wolfgang Wiegard (March 2001âÂÂFebruary 2011; chairman: April 2002âÂÂFebruary 2005)
- Axel A. Weber (March 2002âÂÂApril 2004)
- Beatrice Weder di Mauro (June 2004âÂÂFebruary 2012)
- Peter Bofinger (March 2004âÂÂFebruary 2019)
- Isabel Schnabel (June 2014âÂÂDecember 2019)
- Christoph M. Schmidt (March 2009âÂÂFebruary 2020; chairman: March 2013âÂÂFebruary 2020)
- Lars Feld (since March 2011-February 2021; chairman: March 2020-February 2021)
- Claudia Maria Buch (March 2012âÂÂMay 2014)
- Volker Wieland (March 2013âÂÂApril 2022)
Notable proposals
In the 1970s, the Council was one of the first global voices in favour of supply-side economics, including lower taxes and less government interference in the economy.
In 2002, the Council's annual report offered a blueprint for labour market reforms enacted by Chancellor Gerhard Schröder the following year.
In 2011, the Council proposed a plan for the issuance of collectivized European debt as part of a mechanism for contending with the Euro area crisis.
Controversy
Council member Wolfgang Stützel resigned in 1968 after his colleagues rejected his minority views on exchange rate policy; an arbitration court ruled later that they did violate StützelâÂÂs rights.
In 2024, Council member Veronika Grimm sued the four other members for having adopted transparency rules against her will, arguing that the guidelines on how to deal with alleged conflicts of interest are invalid and violate her rights enshrined in federal law.
References
External links