Munich Startup
Startup association calls for consistent innovation policy

Startup association calls for consistent innovation policy

Saskia Müller

Saskia Müller

Nach zwei erfolgreichen eigenen Gründungen und einer langjährigen Tätigkeit in der Presse- und Medienlandschaft verstärkt Saskia nun die Redaktion von Munich Startup.

September 4, 2025

2 min. read time

Germany is in its third consecutive recession. For the first time in ten years, unemployment is back above three million. At the same time, reforms on bureaucracy reduction and digitalization are progressing only slowly. Verena Pausder, CEO of the Startup Association, therefore calls for consistent innovation policy:

“Germany can no longer afford political lethargy. We must focus everything on innovation instead of blocking ourselves with political turf wars. Only then will our country become Europe’s innovation and growth engine again.”

Founding momentum despite crisis

The good news: in the first half of 2025, 1,500 new startups were founded in Germany – an increase of 9 percent compared to the previous half year. Software and industrial solutions led the way, driven by AI. At the same time, however, insolvencies are rising, especially in the B2C segment. Pausder emphasizes:

“Germany is making progress in future technologies. But many startups and scaleups are under massive pressure. Now we need a startup strategy that brings new momentum: startups must finally be top priority.”

Government without clear responsibilities

The Startup Association criticizes the federal government for lacking accountability in innovation policy and turf wars between ministries that prevent progress. “Reliability and pace” are demanded.

The association also warns that the collective bargaining agreement law effectively excludes young companies from government contracts, as they can hardly meet the required standards.

The location promotion law also receives only limited approval. While it could strengthen the financial center, without corrections to reinvestment, capital market liberalization, and employee participation schemes, it remains insufficient.

According to the Startup Association, the fund risk limitation law is particularly problematic. The planned changes to valuation rules would disproportionately burden smaller funds and jeopardize their continued existence.

Mobilize capital

In the first half of 2025, 4 billion euros in venture capital flowed to Germany, of which 1.7 billion went to AI startups. About a third comes from the USA, while Europe offers weak exit markets.

The original promise of the WIN initiative to mobilize 12 billion euros by 2030 for startups must now be implemented with transparency and pace, the association says.

A European capital market union, opening institutional sources in Germany, more attractive exit channels, and rapid reforms are essential for the startup scene to compete internationally.

More like this

Related Articles to Read Next

Munich Startup Recap 28/26
ecosystem

Munich Startup Recap 28/26

12.07.26
2 Min.
Auxilius secures €1.3 million pre-seed funding
ecosystem

Auxilius secures €1.3 million pre-seed funding

07.07.26
3 Min.
Munich Startup Recap 27/26
ecosystem

Munich Startup Recap 27/26

05.07.26
2 Min.
Munich Startup Recap 26/26
ecosystem

Munich Startup Recap 26/26

28.06.26
2 Min.
Munich Startup x Kinoliebe 2026
ecosystem

Munich Startup x Kinoliebe 2026

25.06.26
2 Min.
Munich Startup Recap 25/26
ecosystem

Munich Startup Recap 25/26

21.06.26
2 Min.