Berliner Boersenzeitung - Germany doesn't want any more migrants?

EUR -
AED 4.31854
AFN 74.674819
ALL 95.295546
AMD 433.864342
ANG 2.104749
AOA 1079.488087
ARS 1638.333927
AUD 1.625986
AWG 2.116643
AZN 1.999649
BAM 1.9547
BBD 2.369046
BDT 144.588608
BGN 1.961543
BHD 0.443946
BIF 3501.010117
BMD 1.175913
BND 1.493508
BOB 8.12594
BRL 5.770675
BSD 1.176228
BTN 112.029882
BWP 15.814963
BYN 3.28932
BYR 23047.895858
BZD 2.365648
CAD 1.609966
CDF 2599.943795
CHF 0.916901
CLF 0.026807
CLP 1055.052674
CNY 7.99036
CNH 7.987242
COP 4423.032325
CRC 539.091949
CUC 1.175913
CUP 31.161696
CVE 110.565205
CZK 24.334694
DJF 209.458529
DKK 7.471234
DOP 69.640206
DZD 155.518213
EGP 61.992842
ERN 17.638696
ETB 183.660452
FJD 2.569252
FKP 0.861446
GBP 0.86549
GEL 3.145574
GGP 0.861446
GHS 13.275493
GIP 0.861446
GMD 85.84132
GNF 10320.839109
GTQ 8.975528
GYD 245.978651
HKD 9.205112
HNL 31.276128
HRK 7.53219
HTG 153.938109
HUF 356.168809
IDR 20592.47181
ILS 3.412324
IMP 0.861446
INR 112.348438
IQD 1540.91948
IRR 1542271.7084
ISK 143.602584
JEP 0.861446
JMD 185.563964
JOD 0.833699
JPY 185.340376
KES 151.916567
KGS 102.833109
KHR 4719.182945
KMF 492.707361
KPW 1058.343204
KRW 1747.218451
KWD 0.362146
KYD 0.980244
KZT 544.950919
LAK 25803.36503
LBP 105467.403011
LKR 378.885107
LRD 215.45665
LSL 19.332235
LTL 3.472166
LVL 0.711298
LYD 7.439686
MAD 10.696399
MDL 20.16048
MGA 4890.184833
MKD 61.622102
MMK 2468.187109
MNT 4210.7686
MOP 9.48558
MRU 46.967162
MUR 54.950316
MVR 18.120474
MWK 2039.625834
MXN 20.241638
MYR 4.623095
MZN 75.146944
NAD 19.332235
NGN 1604.227692
NIO 43.283978
NOK 10.816848
NPR 179.276557
NZD 1.973782
OMR 0.452112
PAB 1.176023
PEN 4.041025
PGK 5.109037
PHP 72.230489
PKR 327.671161
PLN 4.240227
PYG 7229.807225
QAR 4.28326
RON 5.205883
RSD 117.391127
RUB 86.545705
RWF 1720.209715
SAR 4.41177
SBD 9.445237
SCR 16.095388
SDG 706.130883
SEK 10.87161
SGD 1.49438
SHP 0.877938
SLE 28.9325
SLL 24658.304277
SOS 672.215879
SRD 43.98326
STD 24339.026058
STN 24.4858
SVC 10.292163
SYP 129.972992
SZL 19.325957
THB 38.033146
TJS 11.007831
TMT 4.127455
TND 3.364877
TOP 2.831317
TRY 53.37505
TTD 7.973478
TWD 36.951306
TZS 3072.076074
UAH 51.692642
UGX 4421.740057
USD 1.175913
UYU 46.885697
UZS 14281.839001
VES 587.762524
VND 30961.790711
VUV 139.138089
WST 3.185896
XAF 655.579598
XAG 0.013618
XAU 0.000249
XCD 3.177964
XCG 2.119898
XDR 0.815331
XOF 655.576812
XPF 119.331742
YER 280.567763
ZAR 19.365195
ZMK 10584.628235
ZMW 22.239292
ZWL 378.643524
  • RBGPF

    -2.6100

    61

    -4.28%

  • CMSC

    0.0100

    23.12

    +0.04%

  • BCC

    -1.4700

    69.2

    -2.12%

  • NGG

    0.2700

    87.16

    +0.31%

  • CMSD

    0.0763

    23.61

    +0.32%

  • RELX

    -0.3100

    33.27

    -0.93%

  • AZN

    -0.9900

    181.86

    -0.54%

  • RIO

    2.5200

    107.9

    +2.34%

  • BCE

    0.1400

    24.28

    +0.58%

  • GSK

    -0.6000

    49.81

    -1.2%

  • BTI

    2.1600

    60.44

    +3.57%

  • RYCEF

    0.2200

    16.59

    +1.33%

  • JRI

    -0.0197

    13.13

    -0.15%

  • BP

    0.8800

    44.22

    +1.99%

  • VOD

    0.1200

    16.32

    +0.74%


Germany doesn't want any more migrants?




Germany, once a beacon of openness during the 2015 migrant crisis when it welcomed over a million refugees, appears to be undergoing a profound shift in its stance on immigration. Under the leadership of Friedrich Merz, the newly elected chancellor from the Christian Democratic Union (CDU), the country is tightening its borders and rethinking its reliance on foreign labour. This pivot, driven by economic pressures, security concerns, and a resurgent far-right, raises questions about the future of a nation long defined by its post-war commitment to multiculturalism and economic pragmatism.

A Legacy of Openness Under Strain:
Germany’s immigration policy has historically been shaped by necessity and morality. After World War II, the "Wirtschaftswunder—the economic miracle—relied" on "Gastarbeiter" (guest workers) from Turkey and southern Europe to rebuild the nation. In 2015, Chancellor Angela Merkel’s decision to open borders to Syrian and other refugees was both a humanitarian gesture and a bid to bolster an ageing workforce. By 2020, immigrants and their descendants comprised 26% of Germany’s 83 million residents, per the Federal Statistical Office, contributing significantly to sectors like manufacturing and healthcare.

Yet, the mood has soured. The CDU’s victory in the 23 February 2025 federal election, securing 28.5% of the vote, came amid a surge for the anti-immigrant Alternative für Deutschland (AfD), which captured 20%. Merz, forming a coalition with the Social Democratic Party (SPD), has vowed to address what he calls “uncontrolled inflows,” signalling a departure from Merkel’s legacy.

Economic Pragmatism Meets Saturation:
Germany’s economy, Europe’s largest, has long depended on immigrants to fill labour gaps. In 2024, the Institute for Employment Research (IAB) estimated a shortage of 400,000 skilled workers, particularly in engineering and nursing. The birth rate, at 1.5 children per woman, remains well below replacement level, amplifying the need for foreign talent. So why the reversal?

Uneducated immigrants are a burden on the German welfare system:
Analysts point to a saturation point. Unemployment, though low at 5.5% in 2024, masks regional disparities and a growing perception that immigrants strain welfare systems. The influx of 200,000 Ukrainian refugees since 2022, while largely welcomed, has stretched housing and social services, with cities like Berlin reporting a 20% rise in rents over two years. Merz has argued that Germany must “prioritise integration over importation,” citing a 2024 Interior Ministry report that 30% of recent arrivals remain jobless after five years—a statistic seized upon by critics of open borders.

Security and the Far-Right Shadow - Too many Migaten are simply criminal:
Security concerns have further fuelled the shift. High-profile incidents, such as the December 2024 knife attack in Mannheim by an Afghan asylum seeker, which left three dead, have reignited debates about vetting and deportation. The AfD, capitalising on such events, has pushed a narrative of “immigrant crime,” despite data showing that foreign nationals’ offence rates (excluding immigration violations) align with those of native Germans. Merz, while distancing himself from the AfD’s rhetoric, has pledged tougher asylum rules and faster removals of rejected applicants, a nod to public unease.

The far-right’s electoral gains—126 projected Bundestag seats—have pressured mainstream parties to act. Posts on X reflect a polarised populace: some decry “a betrayal of German values,” while others cheer “a return to sovereignty.” Merz’s coalition, balancing the SPD’s pro-immigration leanings, must navigate this divide.

Policy Shifts and Global Implications:
Concrete measures are emerging. In February 2025, Merz announced plans to cap asylum applications at 100,000 annually—down from 300,000 in 2023—and expand “safe third country” agreements, allowing deportations to nations like Turkey. The Skilled Immigration Act, liberalised in 2023 to attract professionals, faces scrutiny, with proposals to raise income thresholds and tighten language requirements. Meanwhile, the EU’s New Pact on Migration, which Germany endorsed in 2024, is under review as Berlin seeks stricter external border controls.

Globally, this retrenchment could dim Germany’s image as a progressive leader. Its ageing population—projected to shrink to 79 million by 2050 without immigration—poses a long-term economic risk. The Confederation of German Employers (BDA) warned in January 2025 that curtailing inflows could cost 1% of GDP growth annually by 2030. Yet, political expediency seems to trump such forecasts for now.

A Nation at a Crossroads:
Germany’s turn from immigration reflects a confluence of pressures: economic limits, security fears, and a populist tide. It does not signal an absolute rejection—labour shortages ensure some openness persists—but a recalibration towards control and selectivity. For Merz, the challenge is twofold: assuaging a restive electorate while preserving the economic engine that immigrants have long fuelled. Whether this balancing act succeeds will shape not just Germany’s future, but Europe’s.