Germany is ending quarantine pay for unvaccinated people

The new rules will affect people who test positive for COVID-19 and those returning from trips to countries designated "high risk".

People walking in Munich, Germany on September 20, 2021.

People walking in Munich, Germany on September 20, 2021. Source: Alexander Pohl/Sipa USA

Germany will stop paying compensation to unvaccinated workers who are forced into quarantine by coronavirus measures as it is unfair to ask taxpayers to subsidise those who refuse to get inoculated, Health Minister Jens Spahn says.

The rules, which will be implemented by the governments of Germany's 16 federal states, will take effect by 11 October at the latest, Mr Spahn said on Wednesday.

The rules will affect people who test positive for the virus and those returning from trips to countries designated "high risk" for COVID-19, which now include Britain, Turkey and parts of France, among others.

Unvaccinated travellers from such countries are required to quarantine for at least five days. Those who have been vaccinated or have recently recovered are not required to do so.

Critics have said such rules would be equivalent to a mandate for COVID-19 vaccinations because many workers cannot afford to stay at home without pay.

"We should see this differently," Mr Spahn told a news conference. "It's about fairness. Those who protect themselves and others via a vaccination can rightly ask why we should have to pay somebody who ended up in quarantine after a holiday in a risk area."
There are also privacy concerns.

Germany has tough laws regulating data privacy because of its history of Nazi and Communist state surveillance of citizens, and employers usually have no right to ask staff for information on health issues.

Vaccinations are not compulsory in Germany but authorities have been taking measures that make it increasingly inconvenient to be unvaccinated.

COVID-19 tests, required for example to dine in indoor restaurants, will stop being free of charge from 11 October.

Also, some German states are allowing businesses such as restaurants or sports stadiums to choose whether to admit people with negative tests, or only those who have been vaccinated or have recently recovered from COVID-19.

Germany has fully vaccinated 74 per cent of adults, compared to 72.3 per cent across the European Union as a whole, official data shows.


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Published 23 September 2021 10:22am
Source: Reuters, SBS



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