Quote:
Originally Posted by Make Christmas Great Again
New figures show that 1.2million migrants arrived in Germany in past 2 years
However, only 34,000 of those migrants have managed to find employment
In addition figures show a quarter of those in work are on temporary contracts
The numbers mainly apply to those from Syria, Iraq, Afghanistan and Eritrea
Just 34,000 migrants out of the 1.2million who have arrived in Germany in the past two years have managed to find a job, new figures have revealed.
The statistics from the German government's Institute for Labour Research (IAB) reveal how only three per cent of those who travelled to the country are now working.
And in addition out of those who are employed, nearly a quarter are just on temporary contracts, with the numbers applying to migrants mostly from Syria, Iraq, Afghanistan and Eritrea.
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/arti...t-reveals.html
top comment: "We are supposed to be surprised. Half cannot read or write . The want benefits for nothing that's why they head to the UK"
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Does this surprise you?
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Does the the Mail's agenda suiting distortion of the truth and blatant lies ever surprise anyone? It's a lot of unmitigated tosh.
They very conveniently omit to say how many of the 1.2 million are still in Germany. They also omit how many of the number left have actually been granted asylum and are able to work after the set time limit, depending on where they are housed.
http://www.asylumineurope.org/report...-labour-market
Quote:
The time limit for access to the labour market was reduced to 3 months in November 2014.
However, with the adoption of a new law in October 2015, new restrictions for access to the labour market were imposed. Asylum seekers are now barred from access as long as they are obliged to stay in an initial reception centre. The maximum period for this stay is 6 months for most asylum seekers, but asylum seekers from safe countries of origin are obliged to stay in initial reception centres for the whole duration of their asylum procedures. In principle, the law thus provides that asylum seekers from safe countries of origin do not have access to the labour market at all.
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The reality of the report the Mail failed to link, of course.
The also fail to say how many are under working age, 26% of the total of 1.1 million recorded in 2015 were 15yrs old and younger.
http://translate.google.com/translat...tbb=1&ie=UTF-8
Quote:
34,000 refugees have jobs - 400,000 are still looking
406,000 refugees are registered as job-seekers and registered with employment agencies and job centers. About 160,000 are registered as unemployed.
IAB chief Möller assumes that the integration of refugees into the labor market will continue to be slow, despite the booming economy: "If we succeeded in getting 50 per cent in pay and bread after five years, this is certainly one Success."
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Germany has the lowest fertility rate in the world and their economy is under serious threat without 500,000 new workers annually. For some time, to help fill the gap, they've exploited the ever increasing worldwide refugee crisis and they've also allowed people who should have been deported to stay.
They did the same with Turkish migrants.
There is little doubt that economically they will succeed while they rob countries like Syria of the people they will need to rebuild their country.
The better off, young, fit and hopefully, fertile who survive the encouraged death race into Europe.
European and migrant deaths and destabilising Europe, playing straight right into terrorists hands are mere collateral damage.
It's very early days and it would be far more surprising if the numbers of people in employment were higher.
More reality, from the same agency the Mail are misrepresenting.
February 19, 2016
Herbert Brücker, 55, is a migration expert at the Institute for Employment Research, the research arm of Germany's Federal Employment Agency.
What a Million Refugees Mean for Everyday Life.
http://www.spiegel.de/international/...075661-20.html
Quote:
SPIEGEL: All in all, do you think this immigration should be welcomed? Or would we be better off without it?
Brücker:
In the past, only about 10 percent found jobs in the year of their arrival, but after five years, around half the refugees had found work
An open economy would be unimaginable without immigration. Just to keep the labor supply stable between now and 2050, we would need an increase of 500,000 people each year. That still wouldn't be enough for us to completely compensate for the consequences of demographic change, but it would likely at least mitigate them. (Eds. Note: According to the German Federal Statistical Office, which provides two projections, a lower base version and a higher variant based on future immigration, the national population is expected to decline from a 2013 figure of 80.8 million to between 67.6 million and 73.1 million by 2060.)
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If other EU countries hadn't stopped them the Turkey deal would never have happened! They're still being allowed to pour in from Northern Africa while Germany cherry pick who they want from Italy and Greece.