INTRODUCTION
LOCATION
- Central Europe, west of Czechia, north of Austria
- south-eastern corner of the Confederacy of German States
NATIONAL SYMBOLS
FLAG
- fusily bendwise argent and azure
☞ heraldic tinctures and corresponding colours: argent (silver), or (gold), gules (red), sable (black), azure (blue), vert (green)
- Quarterly, Sable a lion rampant Or crowned armed and langued gules (Electorate of the Rhine); per fess dancetty Gules and Argent (Duchy of Franconia); Argent a panther rampant Azure armed and langued Gules (County Palatine of Ratisbon, Lordship of Upper Bavaria); Or three lions passant guardant Sable crowned armed and langued gules (Dukedom of Swabia); Overall an inescutcheon fusily bendwise Argent and Azure (House of Wittelsbach)
- 'Bayernhymne' (Hymn of Bavaria)
- Cum fide virtutis (Latin: steadfast in loyalty)
- October 1 2011
- Duchy of Bavaria (Holy Roman Empire) 962–1806
- Kingdom of Bavaria, 1806–1918
- Kingdom of Bavaria (German Empire), 1871–1918
- People's State of Bavaria (Realm of Germany), 1919–1945
☞ statehood lost under Nazi rule 1935–1945 - State of Bavaria (American Zone of Occupation), 1945–1949
- Free State of Bavaria (Federal Republic of Germany) 1949–2011
- Kingdom of Bavaria (Confederacy of German States) 2011–
CAPITAL
- Munich
OFFICIAL LANGUAGE(S)
- German
GEOGRAPHY
AREA
- 71,259.77 km² (27,513.55 mi²)
CLIMATE
- temperate, continental in some regions
- cold, wet winters and warm summers
TERRAIN
- mostly rolling hills and low mountains; Alps in south
- ranging from 110 m (360 ft) to 2,963 m (9,721 ft)
NATURAL RESOURCES
- iron, copper, nickel, uranium, potash, salt, silver, tungsten, construction materials, timber, arable land, hydroelectric potential
LAND USE
- agricultural: 46%
- woodland: 36%
- developed or non-claimable: 18%
HAZARDS
- avalanches, flooding, forest fires, landslides, windstorms
- unexploded ordnance and landmines surfacing in cities bombed during World War II and along the former German-German Border
GENERAL INFORMATION
TIME ZONE
- CET, no daylight saving time
MEASUREMENTS
SYSTEM OF MEASUREMENT
- metric system
- dd.mm.yyyy (AD); week begins on Monday
COMMUNICATIONS
CALLING CODE
- +422
- 111 (police); 112 (fire brigade/rescue services)
- .bv
☞ purchased from Norway in 2017; not recognised by older browser versions
Public Holidays
- New Year's Day (January 1)
- Epiphany (January 6)
- Candlemas¹ (February 2)
- Good Friday² (Easter Sunday –2d)
- Easter Monday (Easter Sunday +1d)
- Labour Day (May 1)
- Ascension Day (Easter Sunday +39d)
- Whit Monday (Easter Sunday +50d)
- Corpus Christi (Easter Sunday +60d)
- Public Service Recognition Day¹ (August 1)
- Nativity of Mary¹ (September 8)
- National Holiday (October 1)
- All Saints Day² (November 1)
- Remembrance Day² (November 9)
- Christmas Eve (December 24)
- Christmas Day (December 25)
- Saint Stephen's Day (December 26)
- Saint Sylvester's Day¹ (December 30)
☞ ¹) indicates half-time holidays, observed from 2 p.m. onwards; ²) indicates "quiet holidays" were unnecessary noise and revelry are prohibited
VEHICULAR TRAFFIC
- drives on the right
LARGEST CITIES
- Munich: 1,503,222 inhabitants
- Nuremberg: 519,344 inhabitants
- Augsburg: 300,010 inhabitants
- Ratisbon: 157,006 inhabitants
- Ingolstadt: 140,198 inhabitants (2021 census)
Demographics and society
POPULATION
- 13,231,995 (75ᵗʰ of 233) (2021 census)
RESIDENTIAL POPULATION BY NATIONALITY/IMMIGRATION BACKGROUND
- 85.1% Bavarian/German
- 3.4% Turkish
- 2.7% Polish
- 1.8% Italian
- 1.1% Romanian
- 1.0% Austrian
- 0.9% Hungarian
- 0.7% Swiss
- 0.3% American
- 3.0% other (2021 census)
RELIGIONS
- 48.8% Catholic
- 17.8% Protestant
- 29.6% Atheist or no confession declared
- 3.7% Muslim
- 0.1% Jewish (2021 census)
AGE STRUCTURE
- 00–24 years of age: 24.30%
- 25–39 years of age: 19.93%
- 40–59 years of age: 28.69%
- 60–74 years of age: 16.36%
- ≥75 years of age: 10.72% (2021 census)
SOCIAL INDICATORS
HUMAN DEVELOPMENT INDEX (HDI) RATING
- 0.940 (5ᵗʰ of 189) (2020)
- females: 83.85 years (16ᵗʰ of 186) (2021 est.)
- males: 79.17 years (25ᵗʰ of 186) (2021 est.)
- 5.19/100,000 live births (4ᵗʰ of 189) (2021 est.)
- 3.2/1,000 live births (15ᵗʰ of 189) (2021 est.)
- 99.6% (15ᵗʰ of 190) (2022 est.)
- 3.2% (2022 est.)
- 99/100,000 capita (73ʳᵈ of 223) (2021)
- 0.65/100,000 capita (198ᵗʰ of 230) (2020)
SOCIAL ISSUES
- ageing society
- state of division between proponents and opponents of the 2010 referendum
- watchdogs criticise an increasingly illiberal social climate
Politics and administration
FORM OF GOVERNMENT
- constitutional monarchy
HISTORY
- 2007–2010: German Constitutional Crisis; Angela Merkel’s government collapses due to disputes over the "Greek bailout" and the German Länderfinanzausgleich (Interstate Equalisation Payments Pact)
- May 25 2009: Merkel is re-elected in snap elections on a promise of constitutional reform
- August 8 2010 Referendum: Bavaria is the only German state to narrowly vote in favour of secession (51.1% vs. 48.9%); a low turnout (60.3%) and allegations of Russian interference allow federalist and secessionist movements alike to persist
- Bavaria’s secession necessitates a reorganisation of the remaining German states to reflect new economic realities; the (second) Federal Republic of Germany – constituted of partly-sovereign Alemannien (Alemannia), Brandenburg, Hessen-Thüringen (Hesse-Thuringia), Niederrhenanien (Lower Rhenania), Niedersachsen (Lower Saxony), Transelbingen (Transalbinia), Oberrhenanien (Upper Rhenania) and Obersachsen (Upper Saxony) –, is proclaimed and votes to form a union with Bavaria
- June 4 2011: monarchists prevail in the Bavarian referendum over the future form of government; the crown is offered to Max-Emanuel, Duke in Bavaria of the House of Wittelsbach (previous Bavarian rulers 1180–1918)
- October 1 2011: Treaty of Aix-la-Chapelle; the Bund Deutscher Staaten (Confederacy of German States) comprising the Kingdom of Bavaria and the Federal Republic of Germany is formed, as are its institutions (Deutscher Rat or Council of Germany, uniting both governments under a directly elected President; Vollversammlung der Deutschen Staaten or General Assembly of the German States; Schiedsgericht des Bundes or Confederate High Tribunal of Arbitration)
- both nations possess full legal sovereignty and international personality but "coordinate" their policies "where required by the Treaty" (primarily defence, economy, social policy, environment protection, judicial cooperation) and elsewhere "should they so desire"
- January 1 2015: Bavaria joins NATO and becomes a EU pre-accession nation
- March 30 2022: Bavaria joins EU
DEMOCRACY INDEX RATING
- 7.99 (23ʳᵈ of 167) (2020)
ADMINISTRATIVE DIVISIONS
LANDSCHAFTEN
- lit. 'lands', i.e. provinces; second-highest level of administration: Niederfranken (Lower Franconia), Mittelfranken (Middle Franconia), Oberfranken (Upper Franconia), Oberpfalz (the Upper Palatinate), Schwaben diesseits des Allgäu (Swabia Cisallgovia), Niederbayern (Lower Bavaria), Oberbayern (Upper Bavaria)
- lit. 'circles', i.e. districts; third-highest level of administration: 98 in total
- municipalities; fourth-highest level of administration: divided into Städte (cities), Märkte (towns), Gemeinden (parishes), Dörfer (villages) and Weiler (hamlets) – depending on their population size, tax yield and ability to self-administrate
CONSTITUTION
HISTORY
- Bairische Constitution (Constitution of Bavaria) drafted in 1808, first to create (male) universal suffrage within the lands of the former Holy Roman Empire; amended in 1818, it remained in force largely unchanged till 1918; 1919’s first republican constitution was effectively suspended by Nazi rulers in 1933
- democratic Verfassung des Freistaats Bayern (Constitution of the Free State of Bavaria) introduced in 1946 and complemented by the nationwide German Grundgesetz (Basic Law) of 1949
- current: Verfassung des Königreichs Bayern (VKB, Constitution of the Kingdom of Bavaria) and – pertaining to the affairs of the latter – Satzung des Bundes Deutscher Staaten (Charter of the Confederacy of German States), both of which came into force on October 1 2011; the new constitution is largely based on a proposal drafted by exiled Bavarians prior to the Bavarian Restoration by Dwight D. Eisenhower in 1945
- guarantees human dignity and right to life; personal freedom; equality before the law; free speech; freedom of faith; freedom of assembly; freedom of movement; privacy of correspondence and communications; inviolability of the home; occupational freedom; property and inheritance; right of petition; right to bear arms
☞ no restitution of aristocracy; only families who had borne hereditary titles prior to the Bavarian Troubles of 1919 continue to be styled accordingly out of courtesy
SUFFRAGE
- 18 years of age, universal
☞ voting is compulsory
LEGISLATURE
LOWER HOUSE
- Abgeordnetenhaus (Chamber of Deputies) with 196 members, 98 of whom directly elected in single-seat constituencies by simple majority vote, and 98 members directly elected in multi-seat constituencies by proportional representation vote
- main legislative body; members are elected for 4-year terms
- Rätehaus (Chamber of Councillors) with 98 ordinary members directly elected by proportional representation vote from party lists, and a not-predetermined number of facultative members without voting rights appointed by the monarch on recommendation of the Stände (Estates)
☞ estates: collective name of the nation’s public-law institutions (e.g. universities, guilds, officially recognised religious organisations etc.), the participation rights of which are calculated anew before each term based on the number of citizens represented by them - Councillors serve mainly advisory functions (exception: bills on taxation, constitutional law); ordinary/facultative members are elected/appointed for 4-year terms
EXECUTIVE
HEAD OF STATE
- H.M. SOPHIE, Königin der Bayern und Fürstin von Liechtenstein (Queen of the Bavarians and Princess Consort of Liechtenstein) (since April 2 2021 following the abdication of her father MAX-EMANUEL)
- mostly representative functions with some reserve powers (ability to dissolve hung parliament, right to demand new readings of a bill they deem unconstitutional)
- the monarch's constitutional role as a moderator between the executive and legislative branches gives them considerable unofficial influence
- H.E. Xaver TRECHSEL VON TEUFSTETTEN, Staatsminister und Vorsitzender des Ministerrates (Minister of State and Chairman of the Council of Ministers) (in office since November 24 2016)
- Council of Ministers; members are appointed and dismissed by the monarch on the Chairman's/Chairwoman's recommendation
- the monarchy is hereditary, the heir apparent being the monarch's eldest child
- parties must gain 3.33% percent of the national vote to gain caucus recognition
- following general elections, the monarch must task the chairman/chairwoman of the largest caucus/coalition in the Chamber of Deputies with the forming of a government; if that deputy is unable to form a government in 45 days, the monarch may give aforesaid task to any other Deputy they deem able
- political parties must commit to a coalition option prior to the elections; no coalition may consist of more than three individual caucuses
JUDICIARY
LEGAL SYSTEM
- civil law system
- accepts compulsory ICJ jurisdiction with reservations; accepts ICCt jurisdiction
- Reichsgerichtshof (High Court of Justice): 168 judges organised into 24 7-judge panels (14 ordinary panels, 10 special panels); members are selected by a commission consisting of the Minister of Justice, the deans of law of Bavaria’s universities and an equal number of Deputies and Councillors; the candidates are appointed by the monarch and serve till mandatory retirement at age 66
- Bayerischer Verfassungsgerichtshof (Constitutional Court of Bavaria); 12 judges and 12 alternates, 12 of whom are selected and appointed as above while 12 are co-opted by the sitting judges by way of simple majority vote
- 10 years of age
- corrective actions: courts may impose alternative sentences tailored to the nature of a (lesser) offence if such punishment may be sufficient to defend the legal order and correct the delinquent's behaviour (e.g. community service)
- monetary fine: imposed in daily rates (no less than 7, no more than 365) set at no less than Ƒ1 and no more than Ƒ1,000,000; default imprisonment can be imposed instead of an unrecoverable fine, with 1 daily rate corresponding to 1 day of imprisonment
- fixed-term imprisonment: between 7 days and 30 years; may be suspended on probation for first offenders
- imprisonment for life: in statute for deliberate causation of death and protracted suffering; life in prison may also be imposed on a multiple offender if all minimum terms of imprisonment would amount to more than 30 years
- corresponds to the admissible minimum term of imprisonment for the offence in question, but at least 3 years; offences punishable by imprisonment for life are not subject to a statute of limitations
POLITICAL ISSUES
- watchdogs criticise what they call an "increasingly illiberal" style of government
Economy
OVERVIEW
- forming a common market with Germany, Bavaria is a part of the European Economic Area (EEA)
- transitional agreements grant tax breaks and other benefits to German companies
- major global economy; home of car manufacturers like Audi, BMW, MAN; consumer goods producers like Adidas, Puma, BSH; engineering firms like Siemens, MTU, Kuka; financial companies like Allianz, Unicredit, Munich Re; tech firms like Infineon, Celonis, Fraunhofer
- sizable tourism sector thanks to world-famous destinations such as Neuschwanstein Castle; winter sports; picturesque nature
- Bavaria has the highest number of breweries and the oldest operating brewery in the world ('Weihenstephan', established 752 AD)
CURRENCY
- Bayerischer Gulden (Bavarian Guilder, linked to the Euro: Ƒ1 = €1 ≅ $1.17)
GROSS DOMESTIC PRODUCT
- $769 billion (19ᵗʰ of 186) (2022 est.)
GROSS DOMESTIC PRODUCT GROWTH RATE
- +1.15% (2022 forecast)
- +0.45% (2021 est.)
- +0.35% (2020)
- +2.55% (2019)
- +2.25% (2018)
GROSS DOMESTIC PRODUCT PER CAPITA
- $58,116 (13ᵗʰ of 186) (2022 est.)
NATIONAL FINANCES
REVENUES
- $299.95 billion (2022)
- $344.10 billion (2022)
- 55.20% of GDP (2022)
ECONOMIC PORTFOLIO
- Primary sector: 1.0%
- Secondary sector: 31.9%
- Tertiary sector: 67.1% (2021 est.)
LABOUR FORCE
- 7,875,220 (2022 est.)
AGRICULTURAL GOODS
- wheat, barley, hops, sugar beets, fruit, cabbages; dairy products; cattle, pigs, poultry
INDUSTRIES
- among the most technologically advanced producers of iron, steel, cement, chemicals, machinery, vehicles, machine tools, electronics, food and beverages, textiles
EXPORTS
- $296.50 billion (2022 forecast)
- $290.87 billion (2021 est.)
- $298.24 billion (2020 est.)
- $300.90 billion (2019 est.)
- $300.30 billion (2018 est.)
EXPORT PARTNERS OTHER THAN GERMANY
- China (People's Republic of) 8.95%, Netherlands 8.20%, United States 7.43%, France 6.61%, Switzerland 5.55%, Austria 5.19%, Poland 4.37%, United Kingdom 4.29%, Oman 3.41%, Singapore 2.00% (2021)
EXPORTED GOODS
- cars, machinery, electronics, chemicals, aircraft, pharmaceuticals, foodstuffs, textiles (2021)
IMPORTS
- $274.05 billion (2022 forecast)
- $274.99 billion (2021 est.)
- $282.70 billion (2020 est.)
- $271.43 billion (2019 est.)
- $269.07 billion (2018 est.)
IMPORT PARTNERS OTHER THAN GERMANY
- Austria 10.68%, Netherlands 10.40%, China (People's Republic of) 8.05%, France 7.23%, Czechia 6.95%, Poland 5.12%, Italy 5.09%, United States 4.78%, Switzerland 4.40%, Belgium 4.23% (2021)
IMPORTED GOODS
- chemicals, fuels, metals, rare earths, electronics, agricultural goods, pharmaceuticals (2021)
RESERVES OF GOLD AND FOREIGN CURRENCY
- $70.16 billion (2021 est.)
ELECTRICITY
ELECTRICITY PRODUCTION
- 90.20 TWh (2020 est.)
- 45.19 TWh (50.1%) (2020 est.)
- 76.56 TWh (2020 est.)
TRANSPORTATION
ROADWAYS
- 133,515 km (82,962 mi) paved of 133,515 km (82,962 mi) total; including 5,544 km (3,444 mi) of motorways (2020)
☞ no speed limit on motorways (autobahn)
- 536 km (333 mi) navigable
- Main-Danube Canal links North Sea and Black Sea
- 4,507 km (2,800 mi) electrified of 6,010 km (3,734 mi) total (2020)
- international airports: 2 (MUC, NUE)
- transregional airports: 2 (FMM, OBF)
- airfields with paved runways: 28 (2020)
- registered air carriers: 9 with 139 aircraft
- civil aircraft registration prefix: BV
☞ BV-AAAA to BV-ZZZZ reserved for commercial air-travel, BV-0001 to BV-9999 for state-owned (non-combatant) aircraft; BV-XZ01 to BV-XZ99 for test aircraft; BV-ZA01 to BV-ZA99 for non-profit organisations; BV-C01AA to BV-C99ZZ for general aviation
ECONOMIC ISSUES
- excess supply of employment due to demographic change
- heavy reliance on imported gas and oil
- economic impact of the SARS-CoV-2 pandemic
- economic impact of sanctions against Russia
- public debt has increased by 94% since 2011 due to costs associated with the secession and geopolitical challenges
Military
OVERVIEW
- amongst the first public institutions established, the Army of the Kingdom of Bavaria (AKB) is responsible for "the defence of Bavaria and her allies in compliance with international law", the "protection of world peace and free trade" and "providing humanitarian aid" (VKB Sec. 87)
- absorbed some Federal German units previously stationed in Bavaria, e.g. 74th Tactical Air Wing at Neuburg Air Base
- the Treaty of Aix-la-Chapelle requires the Kingdom of Bavaria to commit 1 mechanised division and other forces to the defence of the Confederacy; if under attack, Bavaria's forces form the bilateral Confederate Defence Forces with the Federal Republic of Germany
- Bavaria's defence industry complex – comprising e.g. tank builder KMW, aircraft manufacturer Airbus, sensor technology specialist Hensoldt et.al. – is capable of manufacturing the full spectrum of air and land military weapons systems
- foreign suppliers include France, United States, Italy, Czechia, Poland, Austria, Switzerland, Israel
INSIGNIA
- The Black Cross – associated with Germanic lands since the Middle Ages – continues to be used by the German States, their militaries and joint defence force to identify military aircraft. Checkerboards in the respective state's national colours are placed underneath the cross as a means of differentiation. Subdued markings may be used on some combat aircraft.
EXPENDITURES
- 4.10% of GDP (2022 forecast)
- 1.82% of GDP (2021)
- 2.10% of GDP (2020)
- 2.55% of GDP (2019)
- 2.00% of GDP (2018)
COMMANDER-IN-CHIEF
- H.M. SOPHIE as reigning monarch (de facto exercised by the Minister of Defence)
- Frank-Walter STEINMEIER, as President of the Council of Germany (if the Confederacy is under attack)
BRANCHES
- Landstreitkräfte der Armee des Königreichs Bayern (Land Forces of the Army of the Kingdom of Bavaria)
☞ organised as a mechanised infantry division with 3 armoured infantry brigades and organic support - Luftstreitkräfte der Armee des Königreichs Bayern (Air Forces of the Army of the Kingdom of Bavaria)
☞ consists of 2 tactical air wings, 2 air mobility wings, 1 airborne regiment and 1 air defence regiment - Königlich Bayerische Landwehr (Royal Bavarian Home Guard)
☞ Guardsmen rotate through battalions organised on a provincial level, providing training to and being trained by the regulars, and may be called upon to provide regional security or disaster relief; each provincial command is superordinate to a variety of units depending on its terrain and population density - Königlich Bayerisches Gendarmeriekorps (Royal Bavarian Constabulary)
☞ answering to the civil Ministry of State during peace time, the Constabulary assumes tasks of both a military police and civilian law enforcement agency with specialised capabilities and jurisdiction in rural municipalities
HEADQUARTERS
- Munich (Ministy of Defence)
- Nuremberg (headquarters of the Royal Bavarian Home Guard)
ORDER OF BATTLE (2022)
MILITARY SERVICE AGE
- 18-48 years of age (enlisted personnel, non-commissioned officers, junior officers)
- 18-66 years of age (staff officers, flag officers)
SERVICE OBLIGATION
- both sexes must register for compulsory service
- right to conscientious objection; alternative service opportunities exist within the Königlich Bayerischer Zivilschutz (Royal Bavarian Civil Defence Corps) and volunteer fire departments
- conscripts serve 11 months initially and 3 quadrennial 10-day refresher periods; volunteers can join the Home Guard and are recalled for at least 2 weeks of service each year
- selective conscription: unless a "state of tension" (VKB Sec. 90a) is declared, only the most able-bodied and motivated conscripts are drafted
MANPOWER
STRENGTH
- active: 46,485 troops (2022)
☞ includes 23,000 conscripts, 18,090 career soldiers, 5,395 constables
☞ to be raised to 25,000 conscripts, 22,000 career soldiers, 6,100 constables - reserve: 40,220 troops (2022)
☞ to be raised to 120,000; includes 28,333 guardsmen - civilian employees: 13,115 (2022)
- available for military service: 5,433,100, both sexes
- fit for military service: 4,309,225, both sexes
- annually reaching military age: 148,110, both sexes (2021 est.)
DEPLOYMENTS
- Central African Republic (MINUSCA): 1,090 troops (2022)
MILITARY ISSUES
- considerable demands posed by build-up efforts to assume the responsibilities outlined by the Treaty of Aix-la-Chapelle
- restrictive military spending in Germany post 1990 led to an investment bottleneck throughout the Confederacy's armed services that is amplified by reform requirements in the wake of the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine
- opponents of the 2010 referendum allege that the draft is used to instil subservience to the budging state into the nation's youth