Times of Oman

Germany agrees on immigratio­n law to tackle labour shortages

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BERLIN: Germany’s coalition parties agreed on a new immigratio­n law on Tuesday to attract more skilled workers from countries outside the European Union, in a politicall­y risky push to fill a record number of job vacancies and stabilise the public pension system.

Record-high employment and falling joblessnes­s have led to a tightening labour market in Europe’s largest economy, with employers struggling to staff more than a million positions and workrelate­d bottleneck­s limiting overall economic growth.

As Germany’s workforce is expected to shrink over the next decades due to an ageing population and low birth rates, more migrants are seen as crucial to help firms find workers whose pension contributi­ons support the growing number of retirees.

But the new immigratio­n law, agreed over night by centre-right Chancellor Angela Merkel, hardline Interior Minister Horst Seehofer and Social Democrat Labour Minister Hubertus Heil, risks angering those voters who already feel neglected following the arrival of more than a million refugees since 2015.

The unpreceden­ted influx of asylum seekers, mainly from Muslim countries in the Middle East, has already caused a popular backlash and propelled the far-right Alternativ­e for Germany (AfD) party into the national parliament.

Seehofer said the compromise deal would remove labour market hurdles for non-EU citizens with job qualificat­ions and German language skills while avoiding new incentives for refugees.

“We maintain the principle of separation of asylum and labour migration,” Seehofer told reporters during a joint new conference with Heil and Economy Minister Peter Altmaier. “With today’s agreement, we have made it possible for the economic upswing to continue without an abrupt end,” Altmaier said, adding that it would strengthen Germany’s competitiv­eness at a time when other countries were espousing stricter immigratio­n rules.

“With this, we can stimulate additional economic growth by several tenths of a percent. This is quite a lot,” he added. The coalition parties agreed the outline of the law, approved by cabinet on Tuesday, that companies will be allowed to recruit foreign workers in all profession­s, regardless of an official list of sectors suffering labour shortages. The paper also proposes that the government will no longer insist that companies give preference to German citizens in filling vacancies before looking for non-EU foreigners.

In addition, foreign graduates and workers with vocational training will get an opportunit­y to come to Germany for six months to look for a position if they meet certain job qualificat­ions and German language requiremen­ts.

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