Applying for social benefits should not feel like trying to find an exit in a corn maze, while someone keeps changing the walls. Yet that is exactly how it works for many people. I kept hearing the same words over and over, “administrative ping pong,” and the numbers were worse than I expected, “90% handed in wrong.” If the goal of a social safety net is to catch people before they fall, we are currently sewing the net with holes and then asking people to jump through hoops to patch them.
There are roughly 30 to 40 different state funded social benefits, each with its own rules and its own gatekeepers. Information is decentralized, forms are opaque, and even well-meaning officials end up pointing people from office to office. The result is predictable, people either give up, or submit incomplete or unreadable applications. As someone bluntly put it, “we guide through this complete jungle,” but most people don’t find the trailhead.
Two numbers tell the story. Between 35 and 60 percent of people who are entitled to help never claim it. And among the applications that do arrive, the majority are incomplete or incorrectly documented. That wastes the applicant’s time, and the administration’s time, which, in Berlin for example, can average about €260 per living allowance application, with real processing time closer to three hours. Social benefit systems are intended to reduce economic insecurity, instead they often add administrative friction that deepens it.
The temptation is to throw AI and fancy UX at the problem and call it modern. But the fixes are messier and more practical. They focus on two big things, centralization of relevant information and reducing the error rate on submission.
If you do those things you can halve the incorrect applications, lower municipal workload, and speed up real assistance. That is not hype, that is math.
This is where people get nervous, and rightly so. There is a legal difference between providing information and giving legal advice. As the rule reads, “as soon as it comes to single case consultation,” you are entering the legal services zone that requires professional accreditation. The practical implication is that digital tools must stay within predictable, rule based guidance, and avoid personal legal counseling.
That said, a calculator that implements clear legislated rules is information, not consultation. The sweet spot is deterministic if-then logic, where answers don’t involve interpretive wiggle room. In those spots, automation and even AI can be safe, especially if the system discloses its limitations, cites sources, and keeps a human in the loop for ambiguous cases.
Digital tools alone are not a cure. The biggest barrier is organizational, not technical. Municipalities are often trapped in long contracts with legacy vendors, and procurement processes prefer incremental upgrades. Add the human element, officials who worry about job security or system stability, and you have a recipe for inertia. There is also the sacred fear, change might break things if we pull the cord. Fair point, but doing nothing is also breaking things, just more slowly.
Interoperability is the practical blocker. The ideal future requires data to flow across registration authorities, tax offices, health insurers, and municipal systems. Many of those systems are closed or proprietary. Workarounds like RPA can help short term, but real progress demands APIs and data sharing agreements that respect privacy.
There are incremental wins that stack up into real change.
At the far end, the system should be proactive. Imagine the state recognizing you qualify for a benefit and asking, politely, do you want this, yes or no. The data is already sitting in many public registers, it just needs safe integration and better design.
I am pragmatic about how slow bureaucracies move, and a little sarcastic when I have to be. But the fixes are not magic, they are engineering, user research, and a bit of political will. If we stop treating assistance as something you beg for, and start treating it as a right that the system helps you claim, we can save money, reduce suffering, and make public servants’ jobs more meaningful. That sounds like exactly the kind of project worth doing.
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