The Japan Times - Germany doesn't want any more migrants?

EUR -
AED 4.187717
AFN 74.118724
ALL 93.647202
AMD 418.017948
ANG 2.041761
AOA 1045.64547
ARS 1700.986892
AUD 1.642418
AWG 2.052521
AZN 1.935695
BAM 1.952614
BBD 2.299049
BDT 140.690445
BGN 1.956022
BHD 0.430398
BIF 3395.8592
BMD 1.140289
BND 1.473496
BOB 7.895174
BRL 5.826079
BSD 1.141438
BTN 108.73758
BWP 15.437811
BYN 3.262976
BYR 22349.67351
BZD 2.295754
CAD 1.615471
CDF 2574.773493
CHF 0.923224
CLF 0.026869
CLP 1057.469941
CNY 7.727684
CNH 7.735587
COP 3722.395138
CRC 519.252769
CUC 1.140289
CUP 30.217671
CVE 110.085381
CZK 24.261654
DJF 203.26834
DKK 7.474849
DOP 67.030631
DZD 151.903691
EGP 56.724723
ERN 17.104342
ETB 183.106038
FJD 2.546497
FKP 0.850821
GBP 0.85195
GEL 3.016111
GGP 0.850821
GHS 13.086647
GIP 0.850821
GMD 83.809517
GNF 10011.664626
GTQ 8.709789
GYD 238.780398
HKD 8.939128
HNL 30.559139
HRK 7.535373
HTG 149.386256
HUF 356.725309
IDR 20609.591787
ILS 3.433295
IMP 0.850821
INR 108.704104
IQD 1495.360119
IRR 1567612.94147
ISK 143.403122
JEP 0.850821
JMD 180.355725
JOD 0.80845
JPY 184.661324
KES 147.530588
KGS 99.716945
KHR 4601.492049
KMF 492.605086
KPW 1026.260235
KRW 1710.285667
KWD 0.352988
KYD 0.951248
KZT 538.121982
LAK 25740.001735
LBP 102219.115802
LKR 382.965141
LRD 207.291776
LSL 18.592364
LTL 3.366978
LVL 0.68975
LYD 7.311071
MAD 10.663202
MDL 20.061267
MGA 4894.014758
MKD 61.544582
MMK 2393.999416
MNT 4088.236138
MOP 9.216861
MRU 45.476799
MUR 53.695829
MVR 17.617559
MWK 1979.370392
MXN 19.962248
MYR 4.646726
MZN 72.865619
NAD 18.592364
NGN 1572.322022
NIO 42.001469
NOK 11.155309
NPR 173.980128
NZD 1.980301
OMR 0.438884
PAB 1.141438
PEN 3.877673
PGK 5.095686
PHP 70.147756
PKR 317.30148
PLN 4.331829
PYG 6939.676986
QAR 4.16141
RON 5.237123
RSD 117.188791
RUB 87.526505
RWF 1676.863972
SAR 4.287105
SBD 9.177714
SCR 16.608601
SDG 684.740352
SEK 11.04343
SGD 1.473961
SHP 0.851341
SLE 27.766403
SLL 23911.30131
SOS 652.335627
SRD 42.886859
STD 23601.689686
STN 24.46009
SVC 9.987704
SYP 126.038587
SZL 18.589668
THB 38.017182
TJS 10.564363
TMT 3.991013
TND 3.374095
TOP 2.745544
TRY 53.595772
TTD 7.755346
TWD 36.619711
TZS 2999.180254
UAH 50.781443
UGX 4200.146897
USD 1.140289
UYU 46.024904
UZS 13786.505467
VES 808.244477
VND 29952.553516
VUV 135.700865
WST 3.148227
XAF 654.888462
XAG 0.019261
XAU 0.000279
XCD 3.081689
XCG 2.057243
XDR 0.814471
XOF 654.888462
XPF 119.331742
YER 270.334155
ZAR 18.651257
ZMK 10263.9783
ZMW 20.575428
ZWL 367.172742
  • CMSC

    0.0650

    22.085

    +0.29%

  • RBGPF

    0.3500

    67.35

    +0.52%

  • RELX

    0.3700

    32.44

    +1.14%

  • AZN

    -6.8800

    171.61

    -4.01%

  • RIO

    1.0500

    90.54

    +1.16%

  • BTI

    -0.0151

    60.02

    -0.03%

  • GSK

    0.3100

    52.78

    +0.59%

  • NGG

    0.2700

    82.59

    +0.33%

  • BP

    0.6500

    39.2

    +1.66%

  • RYCEF

    0.3800

    19.46

    +1.95%

  • CMSD

    0.0700

    22.38

    +0.31%

  • JRI

    -0.0200

    13.01

    -0.15%

  • BCC

    3.8200

    76.06

    +5.02%

  • BCE

    0.0600

    21.38

    +0.28%

  • VOD

    1.6400

    14.72

    +11.14%


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.