MrWayne said:
I heavily disagree with you last sentence. In 2018 roughly every fourth refugee worked in a "sozialversicherungspflichtigen"(social insurance requiring?) job which means the refugees a probably a net loss for the german state, I would go even further and say the the overall contribution of the refugees to the german economy is very little because the money the german state spends on refugees could be used a lot more efficiently if invested differently. But all those things I stated above aren't that dramatic because we speak about refugees, they're here because they aren't safe in their own country and not because they contribute so much to the german economy. Asylum is a terrible tool to combat the lack of skilled workforce and it was never intended to be one, it's heavily beneficial for criminal structures and refugees have a huge initial cost before they can contribute to the economy. What we should do instead is a) make a immigration law ,similar to those in Canada and the US, for skilled workers from non EU countries who can immediately partake in the german job market. b) We have to be more welcoming to those immigrants, I recently read about a Study who asked immigrants in different countries about their work and life and those in germany said the the working conditions are very good but they don't feel particualary welcomed in germany. |
@bolded: You got a link for that?
Also, I said immigrants, not refugees. Though of course tons of these came with the immigrants during the heights of the Syrian, Irak and Lybian wars.
a) Germany already has this
b) I think that's true more or less for every country, especially on first contact with foreigners. Best advice would be imo to get those people of different culture to interact with each other to destroy the fears and prejudices on both sides.
c) Which is also one of the reasons why there are shortages in manufacturing jobs. In fact, the politicians are trying for decades to get German families to have more kids, why do you think they are pushing the KITAs so hard for instance? It's because they can't go out and say "fuck more, you're dying out! And without children we can't guarantee the pensions anymore."; that would be political suicide. So they're trying to incentivise the families to have more children, with Kitas (so they don't have to take care of them all the time), Familiengeld, and so on. Problem is that it's not really working. Germans (and much of eastern Europe) seem to become more and more DINKs
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