The target “has been missed,” government spokesman Steffen Hebestreit acknowledged at a regular news conference. The vaccination rate is “significantly better than it was before, but it isn’t 80%.”
Causes include unwillingness to get vaccinated and “perhaps also communication weaknesses,” Hebestreit said. He noted that the pace of vaccinations, which in December sometimes topped 1 million per day, slowed over Christmas and hasn’t recovered as much as officials hoped. Over the past week, an average 351,000 shots per day were administered.
While the number of people getting boosters has risen quickly, the proportion of the population getting a first shot has only crept higher in recent weeks.
Chancellor Olaf Scholz and Germany’s 16 state governors decided a week ago to keep various restrictions in place in the face of rising infections, but not to expand them. Scholz also announced a new advertising campaign to encourage vaccination.
The health minister has said that a wave caused by the omicron variant is likely to peak in mid- to late February. “At the moment, I would warn against thinking too early that it’s over,” Hebestreit said.
German lawmakers last week debated a possible universal vaccination mandate, which Scholz supports but has left to parliament to design. It’s unclear when any legislation will go to a vote, but it will be spring at least before any mandate comes into effect.
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