March 7, 2026 • By Calvin Boschetto
Why Private Insurance Builds Aging Reserves — and Public Insurance Does Not
Two Different Financing Philosophies
Germany’s two health systems operate on fundamentally different financial principles.
Public insurance → pay-as-you-go redistribution.
Private insurance → capital-funded actuarial calculation.
What Aging Reserves Are
In private health insurance, part of every premium is not used immediately.
Instead, it is saved as a capital reserve.
This reserve is called:
Altersrückstellung (aging reserve).
Its purpose is to smooth premium development later in life.
Why Medical Costs Rise With Age
Healthcare costs increase significantly over time.
Typical spending distribution:
- Early adulthood: low
- Middle age: moderate
- Retirement: highest
Without reserves, premiums would rise dramatically in later years.
The Capital Accumulation Model
Private insurers therefore build a financial buffer during earlier years.
In simplified form:
Premium
↓
Current Medical Cost
↓
Reserve Accumulation
These reserves are invested and accumulate over decades.
Why the Public System Does Not Build Reserves
The statutory system operates differently.
Current contributions finance current expenditures.
This means:
- No personal capital accumulation
- Future costs depend on future contributors
The model relies on intergenerational solidarity.
Long-Term Implications
Both systems reflect different policy philosophies:
Public system → collective redistribution.
Private system → actuarial long-term financing.
Understanding this distinction is essential when evaluating the long-term dynamics of health insurance contributions.
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