Official salaries
In Germany , official remuneration refers to the alimentation of prominent officials who, instead of an employment relationship, are in an official relationship and are not entitled to remuneration according to the Federal Salary Act or the salary laws of the states . Official salaries are usually made up of the official salary (base salary) and other components such as family allowances and service expense allowances . In addition, there may be an entitlement to an official residence or a company vehicle for unrestricted use.
Officials who receive official salaries are not civil servants . Their official relationships are regulated in the constitution or by special law. For example, office pay is given:
- Federal President
- Federal Chancellor ( Section 11 BMinG )
- Federal Minister ( Section 11 BMinG)
- Parliamentary State Secretaries ( Section 5, Paragraph 1, Clause 1 ParlStG )
- Federal Commissioner for Data Protection and Freedom of Information ( Section 12 Paragraph 4 BDSG )
The judges at the Federal Constitutional Court receive an “official salary” according to the law on the official salary of the members of the Federal Constitutional Court .
The President of the German Bundestag receives as deputy no emoluments, but a parliamentary allowance ( "diet") with duty allowances.
Individual evidence
- ↑ z. B. according to § 12 Federal Minister Act
- ↑ z. B. According to guidelines for the use of company vehicles in the federal administration (DKfzR)