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Germany approves immigration laws to ease worker shortage

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BERLIN: Chancellor Angela Merkel’s cabinet passed new immigration laws on Wednesday to make it easier for lower-skilled foreigners to seek work in Germany and offer rejected asylum-seekers who can’t be deported a path to residency.


The laws are risky for Merkel’s conservatives and their Social Democrat (SPD) coalition partners, who have been losing voters to the far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD) over her 2015 decision to welcome almost 1 million refugees.


Approval of the laws shows a willingness to risk political fallout from liberalising immigration rules in order to ease a labour shortage that companies say could hurt future growth.


The new rules are designed to allow workers from outside the European Union with lower qualifications to search for work in Germany for a period of six months, if they have the means to fund their stay and have knowledge of the German language.


Under old rules, that opportunity was reserved for highly qualified workers like doctors, engineers, IT professionals and academics.


Nine years of growth, low unemployment and falling birth rates have created a record 1.2 million job vacancies in almost all sectors in Europe’s economic powerhouse, including leaving shortage of plumbers, electricians and carpenters.


“Germany has a very open system for highly qualified migration, but was quite closed for medium-qualified,” said Thomas Liebig of the OECD group of industrialised nations. “This is the area where labour shortages are particularly strong. The new law opens up in the mid-skilled segment.”


The BDA association of German employers welcomed the immigration law, urging parliament not to amend the blueprint before it ratifies the law next year.


A separate law approved by the cabinet seeks to find a solution to the 180,000 “tolerated persons” or Geduldete, migrants whose asylum applications have been rejected but can’t be deported.


Such migrants would be allowed to apply for a work permit of 30 months if they have been working for 18 months and are able to prove they can support themselves without financial help from the state.


The anti-immigration Alternative for Germany (AfD) said the new laws would encourage migrants to come to Germany seeking asylum with the hope of finding a job, which would allow them to stay even if their applications are rejected. — Reuters


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