The term “German Angst” has been used since the 1980s to describe an alleged culturally specific German risk aversion. Particularly in periods of accelerated transformation - energy transition, digitalization, artificial intelligence regulation, military policy - the label functions as a shorthand for hesitation and excessive precaution. This paper argues that “German Angst” is not an empirically coherent psychological diagnosis but a discursive container concept conflating three analytically distinct dimensions: (1) psychodynamic hypotheses concerning transgenerational trauma, (2) institutionalized risk governance embedded in European precautionary frameworks, and (3) accelerationist rhetoric in modernization debates. The conflation of these levels leads to the psychologization of structural trade-offs and may serve to delegitimize regulatory sovereignty. At the same time, precaution-oriented governance carries its own risks, including path dependence and opportunity costs. The paper proposes a symmetrical governance model that explicitly integrates both action risks and inaction risks within adaptive transformation architectures.
Thomas A. Blüm (Thu,) studied this question.