She would Not approve of turning Munich into Malmo.the article Does go one to elucidate said:"..Since then, Germany has benefited from an influx of people looking for work, many from the crisis-hit countries of southern Europe, particularly Spain and Greece. Merkel welcomed official statistics released May 7 showing that about 370,000 more people arrived in Germany last year than left, many of them well qualified. Even so, research by the Paris-based Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development found that Germany’s reputation as a host country is “very bad,” Merkel said.
“We are considered a closed place, a country that is very complicated to get to,” Merkel told delegates, saying that she wants Germany to become “an open country that is very welcoming to skilled workers.”
It seems anti-immigration right-wingers need to update their rhetoric when quoting Chancellor Merkel...
"Chancellor Angela Merkel called on Germans to sweep away decades of reticence and face up to “some hard truths” in accepting policy changes from immigration to education needed to keep Europe’s biggest economy competitive.
Germany will fall behind in global economic competition if it fails to address its shrinking population, Merkel told a government-backed conference on the country’s demographic challenges, touting a signature project she says she’ll pursue if she wins a third term in federal elections on Sept. 22."
Merkel Aims to Boost Immigration in Break With Germany
It seems anti-immigration right-wingers need to update their rhetoric when quoting Chancellor Merkel...
"Multiculturalism" of ghettos and double standards has failed long before the word was invented. Multiculturalism as in: allowing people of different cultural backgrounds to come and build their future together has no reason to fail.
Well, competition for immigrants is beginning to picking up. Demographic realities should be clear even to those who refuse to accept moral and economic arguments for increased immigration.
Isn't the United States about to take that great leap forward?
IIRC, there was a report a few weeks ago that immigration from other EU countries (especially those with high unemployment, such as Greece, Spain or Portugal) has significantly increased.
I'd say immigration is most beneficial for Germany. As long as we take care to minimize problems that fuel right-wing rhetorics. Which means we should not let just everybody in, but preferably those with a good education, instead of those who then burden our already strained social systems.
I remember I was in London when the shockwaves of Merkel's "multiculturalism has failed" speech arrived. I heard her speech in context, and her actual point was that the government should encourage integration and learning of the German language (there are too many 3rd generation immigrants who don't speak German properly), and that decades of indiffernce towards the formation of parallel societies were now having devastating consequences. Her words were badly chosen but it was not a speech against cultural diversity. I remember it was a bit hard to explain that to my British and American friends. In this case, the agenda of right wing extremists matched the agenda of the media. Headlines like "Merkel against diversity" sell better than "Merkel addresses integration issues and discusses possible solutions". And the bigots from the far right showed Merkel as a famous European politician who finally said what they had always said.
It's an interesting situation. There's several European countries with highly-industrialized economies and zero-to-negative population growth. A highly-skilled worker from Greece or Turkey or Slovakia or wherever, young and starting a family, might be in a position of being offered immigration incentives.
I really do wish you read the entire article before posting it. It says there that the new agreements Merkel has planned are with European countries. For countries like Spain, Greece and Italy to encourage their unemployed, skilled workers to go to Germany. Why? Because I think Merkel doesn't want Berlin to suffer the same fate as Paris did 7 years ago, London 2 years ago and Stockholm is now.
And skilled workers come from all corners of the world, with many assimilating quite successfully.
What Merkel is doing now is encouraging a brain drain from Southern Europe to Germany, and that is a worse assault on those countries than any austerity program. Many of those people will settle in Germany and have families here, and they will be missing when their home countries recover from the economic crisis.
I agree with everything you write, except for this last paragraph: I don't think it's that dramatic. The EU already allows free travel, permanent residence and free choice of jobs for member state citizens in any other member state. IMO, it's a win-win when these people come here, as long as their home countries (temporarily) have an unemployment problem, but Germany has jobs to offer. It's not a hassle, all they need is a ID card from a Schengen country -- and there are no hurdles at all for returning eventually. So many will probably and can easily return, once they get better job offers at home.
Yes, it looks like a win-win situation to me. Especially because I have the impression immigrants from other EU countries are not problematic at all regarding integration.
So you brain drain from countries with flat or declining population growth....seems like a massive problem for the EU which Germany has a financial interest in. It's neither sustainable or anything other than punting the problem down the road.
I certainly hope so. Cutting immigration now is approximately the most idiotic thing we could do, as a society - the 1924 all over again? - not gonna happen.
How so?
Those countries have an unemployment problem. Germany has jobs to offer.
So either we chose option A: Germany does not hire people from Spain or Greece, but from outside the EU -- or none at all, reducing Germany's productivity. At the same time, these well educated Greeks and Spanish remain at home, unemployed, straining their domestic social systems.
Or option B: These people from Spain and Greece go to Germany, enjoy a good income and thus have a better life than as unemployed at home, contribute to Germany's growth and contribute to relieving the social systems in Spain and Greece and thus the budget.
Really seems like a no-brainer to me.
“We are considered a closed place, a country that is very complicated to get to,” Merkel told delegates, saying that she wants Germany to become “an open country that is very welcoming to skilled workers.”
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