The measure cleared the Bundestag lower house by a large majority, with support from deputies from the ruling centre-left-led coalition as well as the far-left Linke party. The conservative CDU and far-right AfD abstained.    Â
The one-third increase will affect 6.2 million people, among an active working population of 45.2 million people.   Â
The law will see the minimum wage go up in two steps, from 8.82 euros to 10.45 euros on July 1, followed by a second increase to 12 euros on October 1.   Â
Labour Minister Hubertus Heil called the move a "matter of respect" for hard work, saying that for low-wage earners it would mean the "biggest pay increase of their lives".   Â
A flagship policy in Olaf Scholz's campaign manifesto for elections last September, the change is not without its critics.   Â
Some experts fear it will add to wage pressures and price rises at a point where inflation is already unusually elevated.   Â
In May, consumer prices rose at a 7.9 percent clip, a post-reunification record for Germany driven by the rising cost of energy.   Â
A recent survey of 800 businesses by the commercial foundation Familienunternehmen found that 89 percent of leaders feared such a wage-price spiral.   Â
Sectors already under pressure from increases in the prices for raw materials are particularly concerned.   Â
The agricultural business lobby DBV warned against the "massive" impact of the wage hike.  Others argue the risks emanating from the measure are more limited.   Â
Reasonable salary increases were needed to "stabilise the economy" the president of the influential DIW economic institute, Marcel Fratzscher, wrote in a column.   Â
At the same time, unions are calling for even more significant pay rises to match the soaring cost of living.   Â
Temporary inflation was "not as damaging" for the state as the loss of purchasing power for employees, the head of the German trade union federation DGB, Yasmin Fahimi, said. Â
Workers in a variety of sectors are in the process of negotiating new pay settlements.   Â
In steel, several thousand employees held a strike in recent days to demand an increase of 8.2 percent.Â
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