Germany to Reform Citizenship Law to Attract Skilled Workers
Germany is forging ahead with plans to reform its outdated citizenship law, a move rooted in the country’s drive to attract qualified workers to address a worsening dearth of skilled labor.
Enhancing Integration and Participation
The changes also aim to enhance integration and participation of immigrants, who remain largely under-represented in the political sphere.
Labor Crunch in Germany
The figures on Germany’s labor crunch present a damning picture.
Just over 43% of German companies reported a shortage of skilled workers this January, inching down from an all-time high of nearly 50% last July, according to data from Ifo Institute, one of the country’s largest think-tanks.
Sectors Affected
The issue affects companies across the service, industry and construction sectors, with health care, childcare, engineering, and IT being particular areas of concern.
Planned Reform
When the government put forward a plan in March, Labor Minister Hubertus Heil said securing the \”skilled labor base is one of Germany’s greatest economic tasks for the next few decades.”
Chancellor Olaf Scholz’s coalition government is aiming to finalize the draft law before the summer holidays, after which it will be submitted for parliamentary approval.
Simplifying the Process and Enabling Multiple Citizenship
Canan Bayram, an experienced lawmaker from the co-ruling Greens Party, told Anadolu that the planned reform would simplify the process and enable multiple citizenship for immigrants.
Discrimination Against Turkish Citizens
Bayram underlined that Germany’s existing citizenship law is unfair toward particular immigrant groups, especially Turkish citizens.
Germany has a 3 million-strong Turkish community, many of whom are children or grandchildren of workers who immigrated in the 1960s.
Around 1.5 million of them still do not have German citizenship due to discriminatory legislation.
Political Participation
Many immigrant groups, including Turkish citizens, often find themselves in a disadvantaged situation in the German labor market, and while dealing with bureaucratic matters.
They are also under-represented in political life, as many of them cannot vote in local or national elections.
Reforming the Law
Mikolaj Ciechanowicz, a senior expert on immigration, said reforming the law would definitely address these problems by enhancing integration and political participation.
After the reform, many immigrants would likely apply for German citizenship, said Ciechanowicz.
Shortage of Skilled Workers
In each year over the past decade, the number of immigrants becoming citizens in Germany has been under 170,000. In 2022, a total of 168,545 foreigners acquired German citizenship.
Ciechanowicz said Germany is currently facing a significant shortage of skilled workers, and reforming citizenship and immigration legislation is also important to address this major problem.