Behind Germany's plan to reform its labor market | DW Business

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  • Опубликовано: 16 май 2024
  • An ageing population, a low birth-rate and a national preference for part-time work. Germany's labor market is shrinking fast. In the next five years, the country's working age population is expected to decline more than any other G7 economy - putting strain on both the pension system and employers' ability to fill positions. The government is under pressure to take action - and so far, there are a number of options on the table. DW Business spoke to Professor Ulrike Malmendier, one of the five members of Germany's Council of Economic experts, about what can be done.
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    #germany #business #labor

Комментарии • 454

  • @amandamate9117
    @amandamate9117 21 день назад +223

    Why not reform Germany's bureaucracy to make it easier for educated immigrants to find work here? It would be a great way to tap into their skills and expertise.

    • @simba8665
      @simba8665 21 день назад +19

      Even Canada does this, talk one way and their policies say something else. They put soo much barriers for skilled workers to actually participate in the economy. Not worth the effort.

    • @wilg9400
      @wilg9400 21 день назад

      I have feelings that they only want the low end immigrants to do the job they don’t want to do and keep the better job for themselves.

    • @tarcifigueiredo
      @tarcifigueiredo 20 дней назад +5

      Se desmanteló la energía nuclear y se acabó el gas barato.🤣🤣🤣🤣El costo de vida aumentará esporádicamente

    • @JustQuick-gz4or
      @JustQuick-gz4or 20 дней назад

      กรุณารับนายพิธา และพรรคก้าวไกล ไปอยู่เป็นภาระประเทศเยอรมันด้วย

    • @MrAlen6e
      @MrAlen6e 20 дней назад

      ​@simba8665 Canada is basically the North American Germany but with Terrible public transportation. Selling a false dream to professionals when they know too well none if the credentials are recognized and you need experience to even get a good position.

  • @tedv8323
    @tedv8323 21 день назад +63

    Listening to this I am imagining the upcoming protests.

    • @kubuhzz-lm2786
      @kubuhzz-lm2786 11 дней назад +2

      It will be , if everyone will agree they will rise it to 90 years and tell yeah but some people live to 110 years 😅😅😅

  • @arielkira8622
    @arielkira8622 21 день назад +110

    Personally, I don't feel this labour shortage, I'm an expat, a qualified person with a German PhD in biochemical engineering, fluent in three languages (including German), living in the German region that is supposed to have the most opportunities for prosperity in my area, yet I haven't been able to find a job for 2 years. I would have left long ago if my children hadn't settled here

    • @dirmanbw336
      @dirmanbw336 21 день назад +45

      I think Germany doesn't lack of PhD, but rather 'normal workers' like nurses, plumbers, welders etc

    • @bjornisberg144
      @bjornisberg144 21 день назад +11

      Sorry to hear that. I also Ph.D. and never got a job.

    • @Terkini-pr1nj
      @Terkini-pr1nj 21 день назад +10

      ​@@dirmanbw336 especially blue collar worker

    • @half-breed
      @half-breed 20 дней назад +3

      All you have to do is look at the upside down German population pyramid to see the problem. No need for a PhD to do that 😅

    • @aceyage
      @aceyage 20 дней назад +2

      You're asking for too much money. Man, don't be so greedy and let the boss have some left… dann klappt's auch mit dem Job.

  • @pollutingpenguin2146
    @pollutingpenguin2146 19 дней назад +23

    It’s a bit late to reform the labour market when it is already shrinking! They knew this was coming, but put their head in the sand and ignored the issue. Germany needs to heavily encourage families to have more kids, if that doesn’t succeed, then all of this tinkering on the edge won’t matter at all.
    Also - all research shows that the more ‘diverse’ a population gets, the less people trust in each other and are less willing to pay taxes to fund various programs, because they don’t see the ‘others’ as the same as themselves. There’s a reason why the USA has next to no social security, it didn’t just come to be that way out of thin air.

    • @Nanamka
      @Nanamka 17 дней назад +4

      West Germany isn't family friendly and east Germany has low salaries, so also not so good for family building. Germany is way too late for everything. Pension and work reforms, birth rates, assimilation of foreigners. The governments lack of willingness to do the real work, extreme bureaucracy and love of short sighted last minute solutions.

    • @isabelmateus2547
      @isabelmateus2547 11 дней назад

      Could you share some do that research? I would like to read about it :)

    • @pollutingpenguin2146
      @pollutingpenguin2146 11 дней назад

      @@isabelmateus2547 how about you find it yourself - I’m not here to convince or convert anyone. Studies and information is free for you to read all over the internet and in other publications.

  • @sodbuster7776
    @sodbuster7776 21 день назад +88

    Sounds like a scam to me.

    • @rabapatrick8906
      @rabapatrick8906 14 дней назад

      a pozni scheme, that always in need for new entrants aka low-paid immigrants that are doing cr*ppy jobs

  • @dioricci
    @dioricci 21 день назад +57

    Our system is a ponzi one, you just need more immigrants to pay low salary, making them work longer to keep the system working! She even mentioned about Ukrainians.

    • @koushikdas1992
      @koushikdas1992 20 дней назад

      And what could you do about that? Have any thoughts?

    • @danielwells774
      @danielwells774 20 дней назад +4

      That's how all countries work.

    • @Luis-hq8qv
      @Luis-hq8qv 19 дней назад +2

      100% true, low salaries and then at least 40% taxes

    • @tomasmuir9812
      @tomasmuir9812 17 дней назад

      @@Luis-hq8qv effective tax rate is rarely 40%. I am in 42% tax bracket but effectively pay 30%

    • @Luis-hq8qv
      @Luis-hq8qv 17 дней назад

      @@tomasmuir9812 do you math again and include VAT

  • @prithwishsarkar2529
    @prithwishsarkar2529 19 дней назад +50

    I hate the fact that they never mention that it's low-wage jobs which is what they want to fill. Come to salaried positions (>35-40k per year) there is literally nothing. Add on top, the government says something and then the companies choose to completely ignore it because they won't budge an inch from their comfort zones. Sometimes I wonder how terrible the myth of German efficiency was, everything essentially came down to cheap gas/oil prices. Now that that's gone you start to see the bare bones.

    • @ancient_living
      @ancient_living 16 дней назад +3

      True !!

    • @andresoares2110
      @andresoares2110 14 дней назад +1

      I agree as a Brazilian!

    • @meetimian3383
      @meetimian3383 9 дней назад +1

      Yes but good for internationals especially those just getting started

    • @mariabelenviareque2178
      @mariabelenviareque2178 8 дней назад +1

      I disagree, it’s not just the low-wage jobs. I immigrated to Germany 2 years ago. My company had massive layoffs so recently looked for jobs and I found myself as feeling like meat between several companies and it was a game of who was faster to offer something. Completely different than how it was in the US. You can really feel the lack of resources in Germany and off course this is an excellent position to be for someone who has prepared themselves before. I found a new job in 3 months (90-100K) and the German government paid me a 5K certification training to improve my candidacy for companies and find a new job faster during those 3 months. Learn German, improve your technical skills and you for sure are wanted in this country.

    • @andresoares2110
      @andresoares2110 8 дней назад

      @@mariabelenviareque2178 what do you do for a living now? What do u mean by the lack of resources?

  • @saintcolzy8711
    @saintcolzy8711 21 день назад +83

    Language is the biggest barrier to foreign labour recruitment in the entire Europe.... thats why canada, Australia, USA and UK seems more attractive for foreign skilled workers

    • @FranzMullerxX
      @FranzMullerxX 20 дней назад +22

      yeah my mother tongue is German and I agree. English should become the EU standard, taught parallel with same importance as the native language beginning in primary school in all EU member countries. And knowing English should open up the same opportunities as knowing the native language in every EU country. Also all of the bureaucracy (legal documents and forms) should be available to be filed in English everywhere.

    • @aduckett5168
      @aduckett5168 19 дней назад +2

      Ummm they are more attractive because you also make way more money as a skilled worker.

    • @JoelOman1980
      @JoelOman1980 18 дней назад +4

      @@FranzMullerxX As a Swede who is on the lookout for work in southern Germany and do speak german but understand it even better, it's still hard to find jobs that doesn't require A+ level of the german language...

    • @janeznovak7589
      @janeznovak7589 16 дней назад

      And Germans aren't friendly and welcoming as English speaking nations are.

    • @Adrian-Wan
      @Adrian-Wan 14 дней назад

      A+ level is insane , whaaat?​@@JoelOman1980

  • @lipids7185
    @lipids7185 20 дней назад +32

    what are you talking about i am truck driver in Germany in expensive town (Regensburg) they pay me 2600 brutto i am all the day on the roads all the time my truck is overloaded with stuff, 250-350 km every singe day and approximetly 20 clients per day ,i guess gonverment should fix first salaries and work enviroment and the to speak up for labor shortages and to stop the social benefits to healthy young people who dont care about nothing.

    • @SonnyDarvishzadeh
      @SonnyDarvishzadeh 20 дней назад +4

      Wow 2.6 brutto in the south is tough. I feel for you! Yes, they need to shuffle and balance salaries.

    • @danielwells774
      @danielwells774 20 дней назад +1

      Wow, you make even more than Swedish truck drivers.

    • @ridoy91
      @ridoy91 16 дней назад +2

      Youth unemployment is one of the lowest in Germany. What are you talking about? You older people should start actually working and improving urself instead of being stuck in boomer times. You're the problem, not us.

    • @weird-guy
      @weird-guy 3 дня назад +1

      Germany has low unemployment in all of Europe, you pay local Germans low salaries so they take a plane to the USA, in my country we take a plane to Germany,France,Switzerland ect.
      2600 sounds low especially for Germany but I’m not sure.
      Also what social benefits most live of parents and not the government and again in Germany according to statistics is a low amount , neets are only 5,7%

  • @harmonizedigital.
    @harmonizedigital. 21 день назад +42

    Notice she did not mention higher taxes on the richest citizens and companies.

    • @HartlepoolLad
      @HartlepoolLad 21 день назад +6

      Yeah, it’ll just be more taxes on the working class and poor, as usual.
      But taxing the richest individuals and companies is difficult, as they’ll always find legal loopholes to pay less, or will very easily move to a more tax-favourable country and then the country loses out further.

    • @echochamber1234
      @echochamber1234 21 день назад

      who cares?

    • @gaborrajnai6213
      @gaborrajnai6213 21 день назад

      So why did you gave musk 5 billion Euros of taxpayer money to build a factory at Berlin? The guy has 190 billion euros on his bank account, are you bucketing water into the ocean? Whenever a bank or a big corpo needs a bailout you dont have problems with spening on them billions...@@HartlepoolLad

    • @khurtsbaatarbold5761
      @khurtsbaatarbold5761 21 день назад +3

      Will high tax solve the shortage of labour force? I don’t think so.

    • @HartlepoolLad
      @HartlepoolLad 21 день назад +1

      @@khurtsbaatarbold5761 no, taxing the rich will make the rich leave or relocate businesses elsewhere. And if they did pay more taxes, it’d only make the rich richer… it wouldn’t solve labour problems, cost of living crisis, employment market crisis, etc. unless governments invest taxes better.

  • @JosephSolisAlcaydeAlberici
    @JosephSolisAlcaydeAlberici 21 день назад +90

    Germany should embrace English as one of its official languages because high-skilled immigrants wouldn't waste time learning grammatically difficult languages like German.

    • @HartlepoolLad
      @HartlepoolLad 21 день назад +8

      Germany already does 🙄
      When I applied for financial support to start my own business (Gründungszuschuss), I stressed a lot to write my business plan in German. The unemployment office staff who checked my business plan then told me „we also speak English, you know“. And most legal documents are available in multiple EU languages.

    • @solarpowerfx
      @solarpowerfx 21 день назад +9

      Yeah, and then they should rename Germany to England

    • @HartlepoolLad
      @HartlepoolLad 21 день назад +14

      @@solarpowerfx I see that intellectual comments are in very short supply here 🙈

    • @JoseFerreira-zb7wh
      @JoseFerreira-zb7wh 21 день назад +1

      Provinding/ paying for german lessons could also help. Integration is key when speaking about immigrants. Language is a part of it. Unfortunately (in this context) people aren't like bricks.

    • @kinngrimm
      @kinngrimm 21 день назад +11

      The culture of a people is carried within their language. Having it spoken less means also that its culture will be deminished. Besides, anyone who wants to live and work anywhere in the world has to learn language and customs. That just is the bare minimum needed to adept.
      So no Germany should not embrace English as an official language. What germany does already though is teach english in class and therefor anyone coming to germany and is able to speak english will hardly have a problem to communicate.

  • @sagulati
    @sagulati 20 дней назад +9

    I am worried about how she was proposing to do more of the same thing that has not produced results before. Germany needs a change of policy - to attract talent, to reduce taxes so that the talent stays, to remove beaurocratic hurdles for businesses, to reduce welfare state and labour reforms. The problem is that no one in power is even considering most of these things - some do mention it, but the intention is missing.

  • @indigo098765
    @indigo098765 21 день назад +13

    How about cut the BS and get government officials, civil servants and self-employed to pay into the pension system, cut bureaucracy and incentivise ppl, help ppl build private equity instead of seemingly punishing them with regulations unfair tax and pension system.

  • @JanetLClark
    @JanetLClark 21 день назад +13

    Do what Canada does: You can elect to retire at 60 but you get less than someone who retires at 65 and substantially less than someone who retires at 70. This way there is a substantial incentive to hold on until 70 because you get more in the long run, and it's a personal choice.

    • @josered7986
      @josered7986 20 дней назад

      They are already going the Canadian way. Trudeau taking in over 1 million immigrants per year and Germany taking 400k.

    • @Maisel9
      @Maisel9 20 дней назад

      Some people can't work that long, then this is just a recipe for old-age poverty

    • @AnyaKush
      @AnyaKush 19 дней назад

      It is already in place in Germany

    • @weird-guy
      @weird-guy 3 дня назад

      It’s common place in every European country that I know off, they already increased the pay cut to make you work more years 😂
      There’s a thing called planes and better paying countries

  • @ssp5163
    @ssp5163 20 дней назад +26

    The only long term solution is to slowly get rid of the language barrier and accept English in every sector. Interestingly an important step to achieve this would be to get rid of the dinosaurs who don't know English from various positions.

  • @vinkogrgic1849
    @vinkogrgic1849 21 день назад +24

    If there is affordable accommodation I would be happy to move and work in Germany. Otherwise, don’t count on me or any newcomers. What is the point of working if you can’t afford living, or just being alive? Of course there is shortage in Germany. They really should invest into housing like any other country if they wanna grow economically.

    • @HartlepoolLad
      @HartlepoolLad 21 день назад +5

      In many places, accommodation is unaffordable. Sometimes you can get 200+ viewers for a rental property, so you have more chance of winning the lottery than getting an apartment!
      Nice of the government and „smart“ economists to think of solving their economic mess with more immigrants, but there is already a housing crisis which needs to first be resolved for the people already living there, before they bring more people. And they need to create more jobs and lower taxation to improve quality of life.

    • @SonnyDarvishzadeh
      @SonnyDarvishzadeh 20 дней назад +3

      I wasted so much time looking for a decent place to live in Germany. So much energy wasted here for that exact reason. It's crisis and they need to do something about it.

    • @ninae.6920
      @ninae.6920 18 дней назад +3

      They don't want workers, they want slaves...keep that in mind. The system only functions with super low wages for the hardest working people...

    • @weird-guy
      @weird-guy 3 дня назад

      Idk now but Germany is considered cheap, off course if you live in big cities you need to pay big city prices, every country is going thru the same and will never change because politicians portfolios are increasing , so they are good

  • @evergreenvideos5166
    @evergreenvideos5166 21 день назад +24

    Germans are ready to work, provide them good salary first.

    • @HartlepoolLad
      @HartlepoolLad 21 день назад +5

      Pay has decreased considerably since before COVID. Cost of living has gone up massively with inflation, yet people are earning less. That’s messed up!

    • @JoseFerreira-zb7wh
      @JoseFerreira-zb7wh 21 день назад +1

      That's important too but for different reasons. The problem here is a demographic one.

    • @DeepJiesel
      @DeepJiesel 21 день назад +2

      Well, the ruling Socialist party just proposed to fix the minimum wage at 15 €/h

    • @KuruGDI
      @KuruGDI 19 дней назад

      They would prefer not to as it would reduce their own income. And who wants that?!

  • @vladyslavshandov1875
    @vladyslavshandov1875 21 день назад +10

    The heading has a word “plan”. I didn’t hear anything about the “plan”. Is there a “plan”?

    • @HartlepoolLad
      @HartlepoolLad 21 день назад +3

      They first need to plan for a planning meeting about a planned plan

  • @aceyage
    @aceyage 20 дней назад +6

    Living costs have not kept up with wages. Germany is a has-been, who wants to work here? AI is going reform the labor market, not the slow and bureaucratic government of Germany. The woman in video has no idea what's coming.

  • @zinjanthropus322
    @zinjanthropus322 21 день назад +21

    How about outlawing unproductive office email bullsh*t jobs and focusing the labor force towards essential sectors.

    • @mariusfurst4898
      @mariusfurst4898 20 дней назад

      Amen to that.

    • @weird-guy
      @weird-guy 3 дня назад

      With low pay good luck 😂

    • @zinjanthropus322
      @zinjanthropus322 3 дня назад

      @@weird-guy It wouldn't be low pay if the money wasn't being wasted on useless email jobs.

  • @vivekanantha9372
    @vivekanantha9372 21 день назад +18

    After completing my master's in bioinformatics in Germany, I couldn't even land a cleaning job. My visa is about to expire, and this has happened to many people in my friend circle this year.

    • @rodmarker2071
      @rodmarker2071 21 день назад +2

      Maybe touch up your social skills and emotional intelligence .... People buy from People .

    • @denkendannhandeln
      @denkendannhandeln 21 день назад

      @@rodmarker2071nonsense. There is simply no labour shortage, this is a myth. And if your German is not perfect and you are brown, you will meet only closed doors.

    • @dellangloise9549
      @dellangloise9549 20 дней назад +1

      Indian comments say they hate Germany
      Other Indians say they want a job in Germany

    • @lilied1
      @lilied1 19 дней назад +4

      IT jobs are redundant anyways. They need electricians and plumbers not people who know biology and programming 🙄

    • @mzsnayem1731
      @mzsnayem1731 19 дней назад +3

      I am trying to come to Germany, but your comment scares me.

  • @firstpostcommenter8078
    @firstpostcommenter8078 18 дней назад +5

    Immigrants are not interested to learn German language. Now Germany needs to decide if it wants immigrants or not. But once immigrants come and only learn the bare minimum German or sometimes not even that then don't do the surprise Pikachu face.
    I am not saying that immigration is good or bad. That can be done by someone else. I am just highlighting a fact so that Germany government and Germany citizens don't have misunderstanding about immigration

  • @KuruGDI
    @KuruGDI 19 дней назад +5

    Increasing the retirement age will not help the situation at all, as long as companies - that fueled by nothing else than corporate greed - are in a central position in the state. It will just delay and also increase the problem. It does nothing else than kick the can down the road a bit further, but with each meter, the can just gets bigger and heavier.

  • @renanbp
    @renanbp 20 дней назад +15

    Honestly… not even Germans want to live in Germany, and they do speak the language fluently and are never targeted by racist xenophobic people, so… I guess if Germany really wants to attract foreign workforce, they should start by introducing English as an official language, and most importantly they should educate their people against the widespread xenophobia currently taking over the country. I’d never in good consciousness live in a place where random people look at me differently and tell me to leave.

  • @muratdagdelen8163
    @muratdagdelen8163 21 день назад +22

    Too much taxes

    • @JoseFerreira-zb7wh
      @JoseFerreira-zb7wh 21 день назад +2

      I'd say low salaries is the problem. (when comparing to increasing living costs)

    • @HartlepoolLad
      @HartlepoolLad 21 день назад +1

      @@JoseFerreira-zb7wh both

    • @JoseFerreira-zb7wh
      @JoseFerreira-zb7wh 21 день назад

      @@HartlepoolLad if you raise salarys you can lower taxes. Only lowering taxes will take a toll on other things. (specially when talking about Germany) Some are earning too much so others earn very little, that's the big problem.

    • @kubuhzz-lm2786
      @kubuhzz-lm2786 11 дней назад

      Yeah well it's not as high as in USA , I work 60-70h per week , its about 1000€ per month in taxes so it's not so bad

  • @gengargengar7563
    @gengargengar7563 20 дней назад +6

    If the childcare system was existing, we could both work 100%.. teilzeit is NOT a choice for us..

  • @bigboss.800
    @bigboss.800 21 день назад +40

    I am not interested to work in Germany.

    • @solarpowerfx
      @solarpowerfx 21 день назад +25

      Very useful piece of information

    • @HartlepoolLad
      @HartlepoolLad 21 день назад +5

      @@solarpowerfx I wanted to reply with the same comment 🤣

    • @soundscape26
      @soundscape26 21 день назад +4

      Thanks for telling us.

    • @diogochato_
      @diogochato_ 21 день назад +2

      Neither - just wanna a good german beer 😂

    • @AndresNostos
      @AndresNostos 21 день назад +4

      Thanks for letting us know buddy. I couldn't go to bed withouth knowing if you would like to work in Germany or not.

  • @gizemlikisi6213
    @gizemlikisi6213 20 дней назад +5

    its a lie. i have applied for almost 100 jobs even though I have experience and I even didn't receive a reply to my applications

    • @user-lb8du4dl3o
      @user-lb8du4dl3o 20 дней назад +2

      I can assure you, your case is the rule not the exception!

  • @SolomonSunder
    @SolomonSunder 21 день назад +8

    If you are in an office job, the plan is to make you work till 70 it seems. Not to mention, pensions in the future will mostly be just a minimum wage for everyone. It should not be then surprising that no one wants to work full time. People are simply focusing on staying healthy till 90 instead.
    Unless countries like Germany, Austria bring a Irish PRSA style pension where one can retire at 50, the situation is going to just get worse. 45 years to get full pension will already cancel Germany and its sister Austria out for most high income foreigners. Even for the best case of a 25 year old person with a degree, that is a retirement age of 70.

    • @HartlepoolLad
      @HartlepoolLad 21 день назад +1

      Yeah, I reckon making people work longer into old age with hardly any pension is only going to instead make more people want to move abroad to retire, with lower cost of living.
      They need young immigrants to contribute to their Ponzi pension schemes, but they also need to be creating more jobs and enabling the existing workers to earn and live better without further threats to their jobs and income. And they need to fix the widening divide between rich and poor. It’s almost impossible for anyone to buy a house, save for old age, etc.

    • @JoseFerreira-zb7wh
      @JoseFerreira-zb7wh 21 день назад +4

      If there is no more immigration that'll be the destiny for the generations now at work, there is no going around this. There is no other short term solution. If you can retire early who is going to pay for the pensions of the next generations? And for every public instution? Atracting foreigner retirees shouldn't be allowed at least within the EU. It's just not fair. My country did that and it was recently fought by Sweden because a lot of their retirees were coming here. Receiving their pensions there and spending them here only to pay little or no tax is not fair for the rest of sweden and not fair for us that already live here, earn a lot less and have no tax breaks.

    • @MrAlen6e
      @MrAlen6e 20 дней назад +1

      With Lower population and lower immigration who will pay to maintain the pension system?. It's unsustainable to ask the young to pay for a pension if they will likely won't see any of it and social services will be none existent as austerity takes over

  • @y-comboomer
    @y-comboomer 21 день назад +6

    4:25 what a psychopath.

  • @Dankschon
    @Dankschon 17 дней назад +3

    Why would I move to a country where the local population want me out? Doesn't make sense to me

    • @bahaamuhsen3254
      @bahaamuhsen3254 14 дней назад

      is it really that bad? I am supposed to go study there soon!

  • @adrianosousamendes2948
    @adrianosousamendes2948 19 дней назад +6

    What DW dont tell you is that there are 45000 IT people waiting for a chance in the Berlin's JobCenter. I know this because I am one of them. Why not give a chance to the people that is already here?

    • @vivekanantha9372
      @vivekanantha9372 19 дней назад +1

      is it ture ? when is this situation happening

    • @adrianosousamendes2948
      @adrianosousamendes2948 19 дней назад

      @@vivekanantha9372 In Berlin. I am already 3 years unemployed and cannot get a job. There are several positions open, but when you apply you see that there are 300 other guys applying to the same position...

    • @factsare3852
      @factsare3852 7 дней назад

      Leave Berlin many IT jobs in Germany. I know this because I work IT

    • @weird-guy
      @weird-guy 3 дня назад

      Germany isn’t even known for being good at tech, their software scks, you are good at building things but in digitalization you are behind from my understanding, the usa,uk,Switzerland is your better options

    • @adrianosousamendes2948
      @adrianosousamendes2948 3 дня назад

      @@weird-guy Germany is not so bad in tech, but the salaries are awful. You can make easily the double in Switzerland or the USA... I will try to get a work permit for the USA.

  • @Zockopa
    @Zockopa 21 день назад +7

    What is in shortage are well paid blue collar jobs.

    • @Nanamka
      @Nanamka 17 дней назад

      Well paid is the important part. Ruining health for something slightly higher than the welfare money? Times are over when Germans were willing to work just for the label "person with work".

  • @johnwick860
    @johnwick860 21 день назад +4

    job openings always require German language... and if they accept english only language only Indians are preferred... there are tons of english speaking professionals in South East Asia who are willing to relocate and work in Germany

  • @jackbolder5734
    @jackbolder5734 21 день назад +18

    Eh.. with technological advances, robots and AI, shouldn't there be less need to work instead of more?

    • @Siranoxz
      @Siranoxz 21 день назад

      If humanoid robots can do basic house and building construction work then owh my the world will change rapidly.

    • @JoseFerreira-zb7wh
      @JoseFerreira-zb7wh 21 день назад +1

      What's being said is that new jobs will surface, just like after previous major changes in the tech/ industrial front. Also most of the jobs taken by most immigrants aren't the ones easy to be replaced with ai. The more intelectual/ skilled dependent are.

    • @solarpowerfx
      @solarpowerfx 21 день назад +1

      I'm seem to be missing walking robots doing regular human labor around here. You?

    • @SonnyDarvishzadeh
      @SonnyDarvishzadeh 21 день назад

      Everything is possible with trillions of money. It's easier to move factories to other countries than to build robots in Germany.

    • @jackbolder5734
      @jackbolder5734 21 день назад +3

      It's already wide spread. Have you not seen grocery cashiers being replaced by machines in your country? Surgeons by AI is almost there. For your common cold, you won't need a regular doctor anymore soon. It's just a tech thing. Germany seems to be a decade behind.

  • @BlueredCatalan
    @BlueredCatalan 21 день назад +50

    Despite importing millions of newcomers into Europe, you still have a workers shortage. Why you might ask? Because these newcomers aren't skilled workers. Most of them are taxpayer burden, they can't work at a car factory, they can't operate a computer and they can't work an office job because they don't understand the language. Instead of reinvesting billions into the German economy, you spend it on housing, clothing and feeding the newcomers. So you are basically importing a lot of liability. The idea that you can transform these individuals into scientists, Doctors and engineers is naive.

    • @moodomoi
      @moodomoi 21 день назад +2

      Most of our population knows that. However, the greens and the reds don't seem to get it.

    • @JoseFerreira-zb7wh
      @JoseFerreira-zb7wh 21 день назад +6

      Don't really know the reality in Germany but that doesn't seem to add up. Last time i checked the milion sirians taken by Germany had really bossted the economy and was weel integrated in the comunity. You just can't expect to take hundreds and thousands in a short period of time and wait for them to magically fit in. Integration is key. The language is a part of it. If you don't want them, then you can't complain if you have to work till you die. They're the only solution in the short term.

    • @SonnyDarvishzadeh
      @SonnyDarvishzadeh 21 день назад +16

      High skilled workers that arrive in Germany realize they have better options elsewhere. It's a boring country for young people, highly taxed and full of headaches of bureaucracy and waiting times. Write an email to a few government entities, see for yourself they take 2-3 months to reply, if actually they do have an email address. Let alone customer service where sellers literally shout at customers.

    • @JoseFerreira-zb7wh
      @JoseFerreira-zb7wh 21 день назад +2

      @@SonnyDarvishzadeh no country is perfect. It can be highly taxed but it always comes with benefits. Germany has its downsides but it still undoubtedly one of the best countries to live in. Sure it always depends on preference, expectation, area of work, etc.

    • @zinjanthropus322
      @zinjanthropus322 21 день назад +2

      ​@@JoseFerreira-zb7wh Of course there was growth from bringing in new workers and customers but they don't have the same level of economic output as the average native and so push down the gdp per capita.

  • @wilg9400
    @wilg9400 21 день назад +16

    As a legal immigrant who lives in the US and Europe, I have to say the environment is not so friendly in Europe.

    • @JoseFerreira-zb7wh
      @JoseFerreira-zb7wh 21 день назад

      that is to say the least.

    • @SonnyDarvishzadeh
      @SonnyDarvishzadeh 21 день назад +3

      As someone who lived in and visited many Asian countries, I have to say the environment is not so friendly in Europe. They put me in the "skilled worker" bucket, but I don't think that matters much.

    • @Ganymede559
      @Ganymede559 20 дней назад +1

      So you can afford to live in both the US _and_ Europe. You can't be very poor, then. I wish Anglo-Saxons could afford to live & work in other countries.

    • @wilg9400
      @wilg9400 20 дней назад

      @@Ganymede559 I don’t know what to say. All countries have rich and poor and I am definitely not rich but just a personal choice. Everyone can choose their own path with a bit help of luck.

    • @Ganymede559
      @Ganymede559 20 дней назад

      @@wilg9400 Help or luck aren't options everybody has.

  • @suddenly_radical4558
    @suddenly_radical4558 21 день назад

    Soo whats the plan?

  • @factsare3852
    @factsare3852 7 дней назад

    Working in the IT field in Germany, the taxes are too high, and you can not expect to attract and keep skilled workers when we have to pay almost 4k in taxes every month. That's ridiculous. One loses motivation.

  • @ricardoxelmundo5330
    @ricardoxelmundo5330 21 день назад +5

    If the Pay was not so low, I would 100% move tomorrow to Germany. I would learn the language without an issue.
    While I kmow the cost of living is less, I would still want something comprable to my US salary

    • @SolomonSunder
      @SolomonSunder 21 день назад +1

      Unless you are earning below 70k in the US, do not bother. It will be a drop in living standards IMO.

    • @ricardoxelmundo5330
      @ricardoxelmundo5330 21 день назад +1

      @@SolomonSunder thats what i was afraid of, that why i would want something to match my US salary, but doubt id get that in Germany. Place like Norway, or sweden maybe, but their cost of living is significantly higher

    • @rodmarker2071
      @rodmarker2071 21 день назад +4

      You probably would have problems with the 'Culture Schock'
      6 weeks paid holiday
      Beer without chemicals
      Car Free City Centres, people walk on the sidewalks and say hello
      Great Public Transport (Mass transit)
      No speed limits on the Freeway , No Tolls
      I am Brit and I am so suffering here , the people just work to live and have fun, not live to work ...

    • @ricardoxelmundo5330
      @ricardoxelmundo5330 21 день назад

      @@rodmarker2071 I’ve lived in Spain twice now, and been to Germany a couple of times as well. I know how it’ll be there.
      They follow rules for some odd reason, are hard to make laugh, but It’s overall a good country.
      Although I will take 0 attention to the beer comment, coming from a country that has warm beer.
      Our is just superior 100% as we have way too many craft beers to try in our lifetimes.
      But I will have more access to Belgium beers, as my local liquor chain only stocks about 50 different Belgium beers.
      I actually take more holiday than the 6 weeks
      People here say hello, probably more than the entire world combined, it’s what we are known for in certain areas, and I have seen many cars in the city centers in Germany and the rest of the EU. Either way it doesn’t bother me.
      I love Berlin and Hamburg’s public transport system, and the country is a lot warmer in winter than where I live.
      But I would still need an equivalent salary to what I make now, as I don’t want to sacrifice my standards.

    • @racusmashford6831
      @racusmashford6831 14 дней назад

      ​@@ricardoxelmundo5330 luxembourg, switzerland pay better

  • @---lm5si
    @---lm5si 20 дней назад +3

    Why many are not interested to come. Why the Americans and Indians relocate from Germany to other countries.

  • @kastvet
    @kastvet 19 дней назад +2

    Foreigners must learn German for at least 2 years to have a B2 Niveau. And that does not ensure that you will get a job later. What can you expect?

  • @tranngochuan9068
    @tranngochuan9068 6 дней назад

    What an amazing talk, Prof Ulrike Malmendier. Thanks for sharing.

  • @sonic070
    @sonic070 20 дней назад +5

    Basically they want cheap work worce that is prepared to work for minimum net salary 1500 EUR per month. I dont know what can u aford for 1500 EUR in Germany but i supose not much (shared flat, food, ....) not relly some space for savings. Would be interesting to hear from someone thats working in Germany about their experience.

  • @user-yz1cz8lm1s
    @user-yz1cz8lm1s 21 день назад +24

    I am an EU citizen, engineer, fluent in English, with 21+ years of experience and I have sent around 100 CVs to work in Germany and I don't get hired. There is something wrong in it that should be investigated.

    • @gaborrajnai6213
      @gaborrajnai6213 21 день назад +9

      Because the guys who are reading your CV are not engineers but economists, who know nothing about the job...

    • @SolomonSunder
      @SolomonSunder 21 день назад +13

      There is a shortage of cheap workers with no rights. Workers who want a living wage already exist.

    • @HartlepoolLad
      @HartlepoolLad 21 день назад +6

      I know someone who is an EU citizen (and new German), freelance developer with 27+ years experience in the IT industry, has a university degree, speaks English and German, has worked freelance for 13+ years for clients like German government, banks, energy companies, Microsoft, TV stations - and since COVID is struggling to find freelance contracts (and ones that pay rates they earned before COVID, when actually they should be going up due to inflation, and not down 35%!).
      THAT is messed up! The government needs to do something, or they will also face a brain drain, because the best talent will leave Germany for better cost of living, lower taxes, affordable accommodation. and better pay.

    • @revitech8378
      @revitech8378 21 день назад +2

      You might not be fluent in German, guess that's the problem. And that's why no one would be interested in moving over.

    • @denkendannhandeln
      @denkendannhandeln 21 день назад

      There is no shortage whatsoever. It’s a left wing myth created to justify their delusional open border policies.

  • @Boro1196
    @Boro1196 8 дней назад

    Working 45 years on a production line, where you have a norm to fulfill, and 45 years in a cozy office job should be treated the same🤦 This kind of fairness could be only invented by persons that dont do manual labour.

  • @Wombat2233
    @Wombat2233 19 дней назад +1

    Maybe higher payment would lead people to to work in less popular workplaces hust hust

  • @kinngrimm
    @kinngrimm 21 день назад +3

    So more of the same, which looking back did not solve anything, but instead lead to more problems. Listening to economists is inviting insanity.

    • @HartlepoolLad
      @HartlepoolLad 21 день назад

      It’s economists that screwed up economies in the USA, UK, Germany, etc with the Ponzi-scheme currencies. These are all collapsing, along with pension schemes! So much for these genius economists!
      Hopefully, A.I. will be able to provide better solutions and then we will no longer need these „intelligent economists“ 🙈

  • @marick1887
    @marick1887 День назад

    i am a legal immigrant here in Germany and working in healthcare sector, i think i will not stay here longer, because of higher tax, it is so high that my salary will just stay in my sight for only 1-5days then its almost gone, and i learned that when you retired here you will only received less that what they deducted from your salary over the years that you work…

  • @vlad-dracul
    @vlad-dracul 18 дней назад +1

    Raise wages so people can afford to have children. Corporate greed will ruin most countries.

  • @bindipatel83
    @bindipatel83 12 дней назад

    Did she say 45 years of working? So if you start at 25 after post graduation you still are expected to work till 70 till you should be allowed to retire comfortably?

  • @Runnifier
    @Runnifier 16 дней назад +4

    Stop making young people pay for old people… especially when they had it better than us when they were our age. Old people are double dipping.

  • @CIS101
    @CIS101 21 день назад +2

    Even as of 1:04 this seems consistent with what Peter Zeihan is saying, and he talks about demographics a lot. I never understood until about a year ago that one measure of the health of a nation is more babies. And Germany, Russia, or China don't have many of those. Well if Putin goes nuclear, it won't matter anymore.

  • @manjeetgill1
    @manjeetgill1 12 дней назад +1

    Hang on.... didn't Germany take in a MILLION syrians in 2015......and of that million i beleive only around 30pc have jobs.......why dont you make the others work?????😂😂😂😂😂

  • @Ray-ki3nb
    @Ray-ki3nb 19 дней назад

    A very good reform would be to increase the minimum wage , digitize !!.

  • @nishantb80
    @nishantb80 20 дней назад +2

    Retirement age of 70 is just aweful idea. Retirement age should not be more than 60 if life expectancy is 70 to 80. This is like slavery. It's better to ease immigration for educated and hardworking people who can integrate well and contribute to ecomomy

    • @koushikdas1992
      @koushikdas1992 20 дней назад

      Better stay in India.

    • @nishantb80
      @nishantb80 19 дней назад

      @@koushikdas1992 west is dead

    • @livinghope1561
      @livinghope1561 День назад

      ​​@@koushikdas1992India is dead... It is in political crisis right now..

  • @Oiiii794
    @Oiiii794 20 дней назад

    Sorry for the tough love.

  • @cadburybubblegum
    @cadburybubblegum 20 дней назад +2

    If u could retire in Asia please do

  • @bozhidarmihaylov
    @bozhidarmihaylov 19 дней назад

    “Bang for the buck” she said..
    ..“Experiments”.. “aging too fast” 😂

  • @ironman8257
    @ironman8257 20 дней назад +1

    Can Kate take that smirk from her face? She will have same expression even if shes talking about a tragedy

  • @lg206
    @lg206 21 день назад +4

    Or, invest in Germans' skillset, pay them well and they will want to have babies.

    • @user-lb8du4dl3o
      @user-lb8du4dl3o 20 дней назад +1

      maybe this is the main point they should avoid discussing at all costs!

  • @mariop.s.5452
    @mariop.s.5452 13 дней назад

    "a preference for part-time work"? I don't understand this. Workers are only working part-time because they can live a comfortable life on this salary?

  • @borauyar
    @borauyar 14 дней назад

    If I was born in Nigeria, where the life expectancy is about 52 years, and moved to Germany when I am 25, does my life expectancy suddenly jump up to 80 years?

    • @henkstols9326
      @henkstols9326 10 дней назад

      I don't know Nigeria or Germany but my guess is public hospitals I Germany would provide better care.

  • @meetimian3383
    @meetimian3383 9 дней назад

    They better stop all this paper work and digitalize everything

  • @user-ey2of5bq4j
    @user-ey2of5bq4j 20 дней назад +14

    This is bitter but true. Germany suffers from hidden xenophobia. Germans underneath are deeply xenophobic. If they see 2 same candidates with equal abilities, one native German and other foreigner, they will give it to the native German. Only multinational companies operating in Germany try to refrain from this practice. This is true in renting market as well. This has put many qualified professionals away from Germany or they don’t even try. To be able to compete with China and US and tbh just to keep the German economic standard going, there is a social and cultural change required. I also agree with some of the comments here that taking asylum seekers is not a good idea to please the public that this is somehow going to solve the issue as it only will feed the right wing parties agenda.

    • @blackvikingeire
      @blackvikingeire 16 дней назад +4

      I don't see any problem on this practice of giving priority to natives. Every country should do that.

    • @sayuri_vibes
      @sayuri_vibes 16 дней назад +1

      @@blackvikingeire 😂😂😂 are you serious?

    • @blackvikingeire
      @blackvikingeire 16 дней назад +2

      @@sayuri_vibes of course I am. Countries need immigration for areas where they lack. So if they have a local suitable for the role, why hire a foreigner?

    • @user-ey2of5bq4j
      @user-ey2of5bq4j 15 дней назад +1

      @@blackvikingeire you missed the point here. I’m sure your comment was in good spirit to hire local people from the country. The problem here is Xenophobia. May be you should understand what Xenophobia actually means. Also this video was about declining population and resolving problem of declining workforce. Unless you have attractive prospects for any highly skilled and highly educated foreign worker, nobody would come. So you either start producing more and more native babies, give them a pill to be 21 year old in few months( along with magic skills and education) or suck with it and compromise with you economic standards. The problem is that people don’t understand how economy works and how standard of living is fully dependent on economic performance.

    • @blackvikingeire
      @blackvikingeire 15 дней назад +1

      @@user-ey2of5bq4j "if they get two candidates with the same abilities... they will give it to the German...". That was the reason for my comment so don't try to divert as I commented something out of the blue. Second, if you think mass immigration is the solution for the long term you are delusional. Economy is not the only dimension in the life of a country.

  • @andyberberian4886
    @andyberberian4886 2 дня назад

    Im not sure what to even think about in regards to German work. Ive been here 4 years. I cannot find a job...through conections and friends I landed 2 minijobs, but cant seem to find any work other than waiter or casher. I started an Ausbildung through the Arbeits Agentur, but its spirit-breaking how poor the education is. All im learning is how to pass the IHK test. I am passionate about tech and I can tell you that what we are being taught is useless...

  • @dzurfluh2156
    @dzurfluh2156 18 дней назад

    Outsourcing to other countries can work to some degree (IT). But the Germans need to up their game when it comes to English communication.

  • @izzyrov5814
    @izzyrov5814 9 дней назад

    Not a reason to let anyone in and give them money 🙄

  • @fedorbutochnikow5312
    @fedorbutochnikow5312 20 дней назад +1

    Passing a more progressive immigration policy in any of the developed nations is a hard sell now. Here in Canada an anti-immigration sentiment is on the rise! How's that for our known politeness.

  • @terqaz5569
    @terqaz5569 6 дней назад

    Were are the jobs , I have an ms degree but i am not able to find any job... every one is hiring guys with 3-4 years experience.

  • @dond499
    @dond499 21 день назад +10

    Not interested, Germany is boring

  • @cadburybubblegum
    @cadburybubblegum 20 дней назад +2

    France revised their retirement age and faced riots... I think Germany should think seriously about the consequences 😅

    • @Towelie-
      @Towelie- 12 дней назад +1

      It’s just the Frenchs favourite past time activity

  • @bruck2723
    @bruck2723 14 дней назад

    Find yourself a wife, who looks at you the way the journalist looks at the interviewee.

  • @saikarthikiyer
    @saikarthikiyer 17 дней назад

    In next 5 years only -0.6%, did you mean 16%, the working age population is going to shrink by 20%, its a catastrophe.

  • @anzakaleem7932
    @anzakaleem7932 19 дней назад

    Lets see how retirement ages increase goes down politically with the population 🍿

  • @davydenkoelina991
    @davydenkoelina991 20 дней назад

    What about forcing to work those that receive Bürgergeld, payed Apartment and all possible social discounts? And let people that earned their pension to retire at the age they expected to retire after working hard for decades.

  • @alexwyler4570
    @alexwyler4570 2 дня назад

    The guest lives in the California US and she is deciding on immigration policy in Germany? The guest is being paid by who? California BEkerley is extremely expansive .6 million euros home. Who pays the guest salaray? And how is she aware the policies she advocates are working in Germany if she lives on the West Coast of the USA?

  • @harry8201
    @harry8201 20 дней назад +1

    Hey Germany look towards China they have many workers and they will gladly and easily learn the German language. Plus they’re the highest skilled and quality workers you will find. People from India prefer English speaking countries and those countries prefer lower wage and low quality tech workers and skilled workers so that’s why many in India go there.

  • @maneshipocrates2264
    @maneshipocrates2264 День назад

    Take care of those looking for work in Germany first. Reduce the bureaucracy so that educated immigrants and natives can find work first. Stop the scam.

  • @asadurrahmansiyam
    @asadurrahmansiyam 21 день назад

    Consequences of your own action😅😅

  • @marinostsalis314
    @marinostsalis314 15 дней назад

    Why would one work on long hours in exhausting jobs while others gain more without even really working? If a job its not attractive economically then its going to die.

  • @DevendraGuptaProfile
    @DevendraGuptaProfile 20 дней назад

    What kind of shortages? Germany is in recession there are not enough jobs, even if it is, high chance to get laid off during probation due to lack of work. Its a high risk for people to leave every thing behind in their home country.

  • @stes5429
    @stes5429 17 дней назад

    Don't think Germany has a labour problem, with a phd in biotech and unemployed for 1.5 yrs looking for jobs...

  • @joseenoel8093
    @joseenoel8093 20 дней назад

    Hay brains ageing takes an 'e'! Love from Canada!

  • @arthurd6495
    @arthurd6495 21 день назад +19

    How about subsidizing children instead of replacing the indigenous ?

    • @Nolan466
      @Nolan466 21 день назад +3

      U can't force anyone , and children are expensive

    • @JoseFerreira-zb7wh
      @JoseFerreira-zb7wh 21 день назад

      That costs a lot of money and you don't see the benefits till after a generation. The dimension of the problem in developed countries has to have faster responses and the only short term ones rely on immigration really. There is no other way. That's why this all refusal to take immigrants right now is completely dumb. If you don't take immigrants (or more of them) you'll have to work till you die. Choose.

    • @kreativeforce532
      @kreativeforce532 21 день назад +1

      how about paying reparations to namibia and togo 😀

    • @solarpowerfx
      @solarpowerfx 21 день назад +3

      How about not destabilizing countries in middle east?

    • @arthurd6495
      @arthurd6495 21 день назад +4

      @@Nolan466 Hence "subsidize", to make the children less expensive.

  • @BezA31
    @BezA31 18 дней назад

    As long as Germany doesn't abandon its outdated class-based education system, where practical labor is deemed inferior to academic degrees, none of these professions will become attractive to young people.

  • @Rokbin4870
    @Rokbin4870 17 дней назад

    This country is so rigid when comes to adopt changes.Germany want to survive the competition in their own terms only which is fairly not possible.Accept the change or people make you the last option.

  • @sabastian-mj2ox
    @sabastian-mj2ox День назад

    I have different feeling Ukraine flooding the labor market.

  • @Stealthmode35
    @Stealthmode35 21 день назад +6

    Germany need people with phds and AI graduates.. Not the labour class.. Age of mechanical era is gone already. Now its age of Robotics and AI and Green technology

    • @korchageen
      @korchageen 20 дней назад +2

      Even for AI or STEM the criteria for beginners are like Seniors even for werkstudents.

    • @livinghope1561
      @livinghope1561 День назад

      There are lots of PhDs and Al graduates whose not getting a job. What r u talking about????

  • @mtgrabbitwizard1679
    @mtgrabbitwizard1679 21 день назад +2

    Lol she cant look in anyones eye

  • @SonnyDarvishzadeh
    @SonnyDarvishzadeh 21 день назад +12

    I live in Germany and someone sprayed "Ausländer raus!" in front of my apartment. What does that mean? 🤷‍♂

    • @mon0t0n
      @mon0t0n 21 день назад +8

      It's a racist exclamation. Sorry to hear you have to go through that...

    • @diogochato_
      @diogochato_ 21 день назад +5

      Europeans being europeans.

    • @adroitspartan7907
      @adroitspartan7907 21 день назад +5

      Thats really bad but it also means that you havent bothered to integrate by learning the language. Then again better Germany than Iran, no?

    • @rodmarker2071
      @rodmarker2071 21 день назад +9

      Seriously ? You can use RUclips but not Google ?
      Ich glaube dir überhaupt nicht

    • @gregvanpaassen
      @gregvanpaassen 21 день назад +14

      @@rodmarker2071 I doubt Sonny asked for a literal translation, he was asking what it meant about German attitudes to immigrant workers. Rhetorically.

  • @user-vz4ys1st2h
    @user-vz4ys1st2h 18 дней назад

    Stop benefits and everyone works .

  • @ralify
    @ralify 21 день назад +3

    Germany has to reform the banking system to make it possible to get loans

    • @revitech8378
      @revitech8378 21 день назад

      The problem lies deeper than loans.

    • @ralify
      @ralify 21 день назад +1

      @@revitech8378 of course but making capitalism function would be a first good step, next move government services online, but I doubt they’ll succeed in either of those after living there 20 years

  • @Sensitive_info
    @Sensitive_info 21 день назад +3

    "We want immigrants but we want educated immigrants." just take whatever you get, all people are skilled in some way or another. Also, make it easy to raise your own kids.

  • @sempre_sid
    @sempre_sid 20 дней назад

    Ulrike Malmendier für Chancellor

  • @legalitetongue3276
    @legalitetongue3276 18 дней назад

    Start investing on promoting immigrants in Germany; teach your citizens to be nicer towards them; campaign to change AFD adherence by showing how the rest of the world is happy and human and not simple beggars; show Germans how positive immigration can be because all you do is to make it seem as though people are there to take and not give. Slavery is over!

  • @user2kffs
    @user2kffs 21 день назад +3

    Every 60 seconds, two minutes pass in Germany

  • @AlexdaCunha
    @AlexdaCunha 21 день назад +3

    The media space is suffering in from "bipolar acute syndrome". It oscillates between the AI will cause massive unemployment and there will be a massive labor shortage.... 🤦

    • @gaborrajnai6213
      @gaborrajnai6213 21 день назад +5

      Whichever doomsday scenario brings in more clicks...

  • @terminator12cbw
    @terminator12cbw 14 дней назад

    Oh yes, raise taxes and the retirement age... or move to America, where you can earn double, have guaranteed retirement benefits, and enjoy better housing options. The only good things about Germany are the worker benefits, "cheap healthcare," and safety.
    Also in America you can invest in a TAX FREE retirement fund not a scam that Germany uses now

  • @julioalmeida4645
    @julioalmeida4645 20 дней назад

    Be like Poland, accept English-based roles, and offer tax benefits like b2b contracts.
    You have the GDP per capita, longer it takes, Poland thanks