Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Germany: More and more people work multiple jobs

Over 3 million people in Germany work more than one job, many because of financial difficulti­es. Opposition politician­s are calling for the minimum wage to be raised.

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The number of people in Germany working a second job rose nearly 4% in the space of a year, according to figures from the Federal Employment Agency. They were revealed in response to a Left party request and cited by the Neue Osnabrücke­r Zeitung on Tuesday.

At the end of June last year, 3,538,000 people in Germany were working multiple jobs. That's 123,600 more than the same time the year before, a rise of 3.62%.

Read more: Millions of Germans want to work more

Nearly 3 million people worked a "minijob" — meaning they earned €450 ($499) or less per month — on the side of a full-time job.

Another 345,400 people had two jobs liable for social security contributi­ons.

Nearly 260,700 people worked a combinatio­n of two or more minijobs.

'One job isn't enough' According to a study from the trade union-affiliated Hans Böckler Foundation, 53% of people working multiple jobs in Germany do so because of financial difficulti­es or a financial emergency.

Left party lawmaker Sabine Zimmermann called for the minimum wage to be raised to €12 per hour "in a first step" towards responding to the trend. Currently, the minimum hourly wage is €9.35.

"For more and more workers, the income from one job isn't enough," she said.

She also called for abolishing systematic low-wage employment like temporary agency work and unreasonab­le fixedterm contracts.

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