A wage agreement for confectionery workers in Germany has been struck after a third round of talks, bringing strike action to an end.

The Food-Genuss-Gaststätten (NGG) union representing about 60,000 workers reached an agreement yesterday (22 June) with the Federal Association of the Confectionery Industry (BDSI). The trade body represents confectionery and bakery companies such as Haribo, Nestlé and Bahlsen.

Discover B2B Marketing That Performs

Combine business intelligence and editorial excellence to reach engaged professionals across 36 leading media platforms.

Find out more

NGG, describing the deal as securing “significantly higher wages” for Germany’s confectionery employees, said the agreement will run for 14 months, after which the union will seek a further increase.

In May, the union called for industry-wide strike action to take place in June after a second round of pay talks with the BDSI collapsed, with NGG rejecting the offer. More than a week ago, around 1,000 confectionery workers took to the streets in the city of Aachen.

NGG said in a statement the “wage agreement was preceded by more than 60 warning strikes with thousands of participants”.

However, a decision in the Hamburg Labor Court earlier this month ruled in favour of a request from the BDSI to temporarily prohibit strikes from going ahead across nine states.

GlobalData Strategic Intelligence

US Tariffs are shifting - will you react or anticipate?

Don’t let policy changes catch you off guard. Stay proactive with real-time data and expert analysis.

By GlobalData

Freddy Adjan, the deputy chairman of the NGG, said in the statement: “This is a special wage agreement in special times. This result would have been impossible without the many impressive warning strikes

“With this new collective agreement, we are coming close to meeting our demand. The short term of 14 months will enable us to push wages in the industry up even further in just over a year.”

Yesterday’s agreement includes an ‘inflation compensation payment’ of €500 ($544.7) for all employees in July and €375 for trainees. Those payments will be matched again in January next year.

Confectionery workers’ pay in the lower pay groups A to E will increase by €350 per month, and those in pay groups in F to M will rise by €300. Trainees will get €175.

BDSI said the collective bargaining agreements enable a deal to be reached across the confectionery industry, rather than separate negotiations in the nine states.

Ernst Kammerinke, the managing director of the BDSI, said in a separate statement the negotiations were “intensive”. The 14-month agreement brings security for workers in an “extremely uncertain economic environment” to plan ahead into the early part of 2024.

Just Food Excellence Awards - Nominations Closed

Nominations are now closed for the Just Food Excellence Awards. A big thanks to all the organisations that entered – your response has been outstanding, showcasing exceptional innovation, leadership, and impact.

Excellence in Action
Winning five categories in the 2025 Just Food Excellence Awards, Centric Software is setting the pace for digital transformation in food and FMCG. Explore how its integrated PLM and PXM suite delivers faster launches, smarter compliance and data-driven growth for complex, multi-channel product portfolios.

Discover the Impact