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A Guide to Germany's Regional Data

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A Guide to Germany's Regional Data

This version: March 24, 2022. Comments, edits and additions very welcome!

Table of Contents

  1. Statistical Offices of the Länder
  2. Federal Office for Building and Regional Planning
  3. Other Government Data Providers
  4. Data about Cities
  5. Independent Data Collections

Statistical Offices of the Länder

Germany is a federal state with sixteen constituent states (Länder). Most regional data collection and dissemination is done by the statistical offices which maintain websites and web services to download regional data. The website regionalstatistik.de provides access to a common pool of data made available by all statistical offices in a GENESIS database instance. A similar website, bildungsmonitoring.de, provides data related to education (Kinder- und Jugendhilfestatistik, Schulstatistik, Berufsbildungsstatistik und Hochschulstatistik).

For both websites, users can query and download data through their browser or via an API. The R package wiesbaden is a client for to the API of a GENESIS database instances allowing users to load available data directly from a GENESIS database into R. The package and documentation as well as links to other clients are available at: sumtxt.github.io/wiesbaden.

Many statistical offices have more data available than what is available through regionalstatistik.de or bildungsmonitoring.de. The following statistical offices make their data available via a GENESIS database instance:

Except for Saxony (which disabled the API access), users can use available GENESIS client software to retrieve data from these databases.

The following statistical offices provide users with the option to query data through their own web services but do not provide any API access:

The following statistical offices do not provide query tools but only publish regional data as reports or Excel tables:

Since the statistical offices tend to not publish all data online, it is often useful to contact them with specific data requests. There is a catalog of available data (PDF: Regionalstatistischer Datenkatalog des Bundes und der Länder 2021).

Available data on regionalstatistik.de goes back as far as the mid-1990s, but some statistical offices provide longer time series. Another source of historic regional data are the publications of the statistical offices in Germany (and the German Reich). They are partially available as (scanned) PDFs through a digital library: statistischebibliothek.de.

The statistical offices publish the municipality directory at least once each year (but recently every quarter and month). The directory provides basic information about each municipality (e.g., size, postal code) as well as how the municipality is related to higher-level administrative and statistical units. The directory also includes similar information for higher-level administrative units (e.g., districts). There are versions available as Excel files (since 1975) and fixed-width files (since 1993). The latter can be easily loaded in R using the function read_gv100() in the wiesbaden package. The files in fixed-width format typically include more information.

Federal Office for Building and Regional Planning

The Federal Office for Building and Regional Planning (Bundesinstitut für Bau-, Stadt- und Raumforschung , BBSR) mains the database INKAR ("Indikatoren und Karten zur Raum- und Stadtentwicklung“) with regional data going back to the mid-1990s. The data can be queried using the R package bonn. The data comes from the statistical offices and other data providers.

A major advantage of the INKAR database is that data is spatially harmonized. Changes over time in administrative boundaries are handled by combining the affected geographic units to create larger, temporally stable units comprised of two or more districts. There is only some public documentation on this harmonization, but see:

The BBSR crosswalks form the backbon of the R package ags which helps to construct geography-harmonized time series of statistics not included in the INKAR database.

The predessor of the INKAR database is a series of reports published by BBSR presenting district data across Germany:

  • Gatzweiler, Hans-Peter and Runge, Ludwig. 1984. Aktuelle Daten zur Entwicklung der Städte, Kreise und Gemeinden 1984. Laufende Raumbeobachtung. Bundesforschungsanstalt für Landeskunde und Raumordnung. Table of Contents
  • Bundesforschungsanstalt für Landeskunde und Raumordnung (Hg.) 1992. Materialien zur Raumentwicklung. Laufende Raumbeobachtung. Aktuelle Daten zur Entwicklung der Städte, Kreise und Gemeinden: 1989/90. Heft 47, Bonn. Table of Contents
  • Bundesforschungsanstalt für Landeskunde und Raumordnung (Hg.) 1995. Materialien zur Raumentwicklung. Laufende Raumbeobachtung. Aktuelle Daten zur Entwicklung der Städte, Kreise und Gemeinden 1992/93. Heft 67, Bonn. [Table of Contents]
  • Bundesamtes für Bauwesen und Raumordnung (Hg.) 1998. Aktuelle Daten zur Entwicklung der Städte, Kreis und Gemeinden. Ausgabe 1998. Band 1, Bonn. Table of Contents
  • Bundesamtes für Bauwesen und Raumordnung (Hg.) 1999. Aktuelle Daten zur Entwicklung der Städte, Kreise und Gemeinden. Ausgabe 1999. Band 3, Bonn. [Table of Contents]

Copies of these reports are available in many university libraries, including for the library of the Humbolt University (HU Bibliothek, ZwB Naturwissenschaften in Adlershof).

Other Government Data Providers

  • The Federal Criminal Police Office provides regional data on crime in their annual reports: Polizeiliche Kriminalstatistik (PKS)

  • The Federal Agency for Cartography and Geodesy (BKG) provides geodata, inkl. shapefiles for administrative units (Verwaltungsgebiete) such as districts and municipalities

  • The Deutscher Wetterdienst (DWD) provides data on the weather for geo-referenced weather stations or gridded data. The data can be queried through the Climate Data Center Portal or downloaded in bulk from an FTP server.

  • Federal election results for all parties/candidates and down to the electoral ward is available from the Federal Returning Officer (Bundeswahlleiter). The statistical offices typically only publish data for the major parties and aggregate to the municipality or district level.

Data about Cities

Most major cities form their own district (these districts are called Stadtkreise). A little over a quarter of all districts are cities. Data on these cities is readily available from the above data sources. In addition there are a few other data providers:

  • Eurostat, the statistical office of the European Union, maintains the City Database which includes data from about 125 cities in Germany. These cities include major cities that form their own district (Stadtkreise) but also a few smaller cities.
  • Many cities make neighorhood data available through their open data portals or the website of the local statistical office. Example from Cologne: Offene Daten Köln, Geoportal Köln and Statistikatlas Köln
  • The Association of German Cities (Deutscher Städtetag) used to compile the annual Statistical Yearbook of German Municipalities (Statistisches Jahrbuch Deutscher Gemeinden) providing data on the largest municipalities. The last yearbook was published in 2013. Copies are available in various libraries including the Staatsbibliothek zu Berlin: https://stabikat.de/DB=1/XMLPRS=N/PPN?PPN=129075612 and a few editions are available online as PDFs: 1956 / 44. Jahrgang and 1986 / 73. Jahrgang.

Independent Data Collections

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A Guide to Germany's Regional Data