Here we have a delicious little irony for your morning coffee. German disability rights advocates, in their pursuit of wage equality, have decided to look not to Berlin or Brussels for inspiration, but to London. They cite British equality legislation as a benchmark. One can almost hear the collective sigh from Whitehall.
Let us be clear: this is not a case of British exceptionalism. It is a case of the Germans, who pride themselves on their social market economy and their robust welfare state, discovering that their system has a rather glaring hole. In Germany, disabled workers in sheltered workshops can earn as little as 80 euro cents per hour. A pittance that would make even a Victorian factory owner blush.
The plaintiffs argue that this amounts to exploitation, and they have a point. The British Equality Act of 2010, for all its flaws, provides a framework that protects disabled workers from such wage discrimination. The German system, by contrast, treats sheltered workshops as a separate category, a kind of parallel universe where the usual rules of labour do not apply.
One must ask: what does it say about a society when it must import its moral standards from an island nation that spent the better part of the last decade arguing about Brexit? The irony is almost too rich. Germany, the economic powerhouse of Europe, the exemplar of consensus and order, finds itself in a legal fight over whether disabled people deserve the same pay as their able-bodied colleagues.
This is not merely a legal technicality. It is a litmus test for the soul of the German welfare state. The British model, for all its imperfections, at least has the virtue of consistency. It treats disabled workers as part of the broader labour market, not as a separate class deserving of lower wages. The German system, by contrast, has created a two-tier structure that, in the name of protection, has enabled exploitation.
We should not be surprised. The history of welfare states is full of such contradictions. The Victorian Poor Laws, for instance, were designed to help the destitute but in practice often punished them. The German system, with its roots in Bismarck's social reforms, has always had a paternalistic streak. It is a system that knows what is best for its citizens, even when it demonstrably does not.
The irony is compounded by the fact that the British equality legislation they cite is itself under constant attack from those who see it as a burden on business. The British government, in its wisdom, has been chipping away at workers' rights, including those of disabled workers. So the Germans are looking to a benchmark that is itself eroding.
This legal fight is a symptom of a deeper crisis: the failure of post-war social democracy to adapt to a world of work that is increasingly precarious and unequal. The Germans, the French, the British: all are grappling with the same fundamental question. How do we ensure that the benefits of economic growth are shared equitably? The continental model, with its rigid labour markets and high social spending, is creaking. The Anglo-Saxon model, with its flexibility and lower protections, is also creaking.
We are left with a choice. We can continue to patch and mend, as the Germans are now attempting with this legal challenge. Or we can step back and ask more fundamental questions about the nature of work, value, and dignity. The Victorians had a phrase for it: the 'undeserving poor.' We have replaced that with more palatable language, but the underlying assumption remains. That some people, by virtue of their disability, are worth less.
The Germans, in reaching for British legislation, are admitting that they have lost their moral compass. They are groping for a framework that treats all workers, regardless of ability, as equally valuable. It is a noble goal. But let us not pretend that the British system is a utopia. It is a flawed, messy compromise. But it is, at least, a compromise that tries to treat people as ends, not means.
Perhaps the real lesson here is that no country has a monopoly on virtue. We are all, in our own ways, failing the most vulnerable among us. The Germans are now struggling to reconcile their self-image as a humane society with the reality of 80-cent wages. The British watch from across the Channel, smug in the knowledge that their own system is marginally better, while ignoring the fact that it is also fraying.
We should welcome this cross-border borrowing of legal ideas. It is a sign that national boundaries are not barriers to progress. But we should also demand more than legal patchwork. We should demand a fundamental rethinking of what we owe to each other. Until we do, cases like this will continue to arise, a constant reminder of our collective failure.









