The Daily Telegraph

German children want to be police or soldiers rather than carmakers

- By James Jackson in Vienna

MORE young Germans want to join the police and army and not the country’s big carmakers as they did before, a survey shows.

The country has embarked on a massive plan to expand its army, with ambitions to become Europe’s biggest military spender.

It followed Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and the announceme­nt by Olaf Scholz, the chancellor, that the plan was a watershed moment in Germany’s modern history. According to an annual survey of almost 35,000 secondary school-aged children in Germany, a job in the police or army came top, followed by one with German sports company Adidas and then BMW.

The findings mark a reversal in the longstandi­ng trend among the youth of seeing their future with one of the country’s renowned auto firms.

Porsche, Tesla, Audi, and Mercedesbe­nz all followed BMW in third place.

The survey, carried out by the Trendence Institute, a market research company, found that girls were most keen to join the police, at just over 15 per cent, while boys preferred the army or Bundeswehr, at 11 per cent.

It comes as young people move towards the far-right of politics, with the Alternativ­e for Germany party (AFD) now the most popular party among those aged 14 -29.

The AFD party has called for “reinstatin­g troop readiness”, compulsory military service and the strengthen­ing of European influence within Nato.

Polls show that 22 per cent of young Germans would vote for the party at the next election, a drastic change from the most recent German federal election when the Greens were the most popular among first-time voters, and only 9 per cent of people admitted wanting to vote for the far-right.

In eastern states like Saxony and Thuringia, where migration has become a big political issue, the party is expected to come in first place in state elections later this year.

Klaus Hurrelmann, a senior professor of public health and education at the Hertie School for governance in Berlin, said: “Young people in Germany are more pessimisti­c.”

Speaking after the publicatio­n of the school’s 2024 survey of people aged 14 to 29, he said: “Almost two years after the end of the Covid pandemic, young people are still concerned about their health and economic situation in the present and future.

“As a result, Right-wing parties such as the AFD are finding more favour among the young people surveyed.”

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