Please register to access this content.
To continue viewing the content you love, please sign in or create a new account
Dismiss
This content is for our paying subscribers only

World Europe

Manpower-short Germany ups skilled worker visas

With 1.34 million jobs vacant, country will issu 10% more professional visas in 2024



Following the adoption of a points-based system inspired by Canada, 200,000 professional visas will be issued in 2024, a government statement said. Illustrative image.
Image Credit: Shutterstock

FRANKFURT: Germany will issue upwards of 10 per cent more professional visas in 2024 after it relaxed some rules in a bid to tackle chronic labour shortages, the government said on Sunday.

With 1.34 million jobs vacant, last year’s liberalisation of rules concerning immigration of skilled workers addresses a critical shortage in Europe’s largest economy, whose growth has spluttered in recent years.

Get exclusive content with Gulf News WhatsApp channel

Following the adoption of a points-based system inspired by Canada, 200,000 professional visas will be issued in 2024, a government statement said.

Third-country student visas rose by 20 per cent, the number of apprenticeship visas have doubled and the recognition of foreign qualifications saw a near-50-per cent climb, the statement added.

Advertisement

Also read

“We are working to attract the skilled workers and professionals that our economy has urgently needed for years,” Interior Minister Nancy Faeser said.

The new points system means that foreigners who are not EU nationals will find it easier to enter the German labour market and possibly bring their families with them.

Knowledge of the German language, professional experience and age are among the criteria for collecting the points.

With an ageing population and an annual shortage of 400,000 workers, the reforms need to go further, Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock said.

Advertisement

Manpower shortages plague important sectors such as healthcare, services, and technology.

But immigration is a divisive hot-button issue in the country, with the far right hoping to gain ground in upcoming legislative elections following the collapse of Germany’s three-way coalition government last week.

Germany’s employment has grown by 1.6 million in five years, with 89 percent of those positions attributed to foreigners.

Without non-Germans, employment would have fallen in 2023.

Advertisement