FT: Germany calls for more immigrants to fix its shrinking economy

cross-posted from: lemmy.world/post/6837465

Even though right-wing politicians decry immigration (because it’s a populist viewpoint), they secretly or openly want more. Countries without low immigration will lag economically compared to countries with high immigration such as the US.

Original link: ft.com/…/de913edd-71d1-4a36-b897-091125596952

dingleberry,

“Exploit the immigrants to fix their economy, just like Canada”

FTFY

k110111,

As someone who is a highly skilled immigrant, I have been looking for a job for 3 months, my friends (all of them) have been looking for jobs for the last 6 months. Germany needs to fix this issue first before asking for more immigrants. More people won’t fix anything if finding a job is so difficult.

ErwinLottemann,

aren’t you supposed to take all of our jobs?! /s

i hope you succeed soon. a friend of mine is also looking for a new job for nearly a year now 😐

lichtmetzger,

highly skilled immigrant

That means you want to be paid well, right? We don’t do that here.

k110111,

Right now i just want a livable job, like i got 1k eur as a student for working 20h/week so right now anything above or equal should do. My only requirement is that it is related to software cuz thats my field.

Man it is so crazy, i have masters from a uni which is 5th for computer science in germany. My gpa is 1.7 and i have 1.5 years of full time software dev experience and 3 years of part time (20h/week) software/ML engineering experience. And i have sent 70-80 applications and yet no interview. Like people if my creds are not enough to get me even 1 interview where i can show that i have skills that i claim to have then what will??

Nacktmull,
@Nacktmull@lemmy.world avatar

ThEy’Re sTEaLinG ouR JoBs!!!

Mopswasser,

If Germany had an influx of highly qualified workers and professionals I guarantee you there wouldn’t be as much discussion. Immigration comes in different types.

Don_alForno,

Germany needs workers on all levels of qualification.

Mopswasser,

Might be but letting people incompatible with our shared values in has always been a bad idea, especially when you let them stay indefinitely.

Don_alForno,

letting people incompatible with our shared values in has always been a bad idea,

Agreed, we shouldn’t have let Poland and Hungary join.

Mopswasser,

Haven’t seen them burn flags and smash public property in my town though, lately.

Don_alForno,

I also haven’t seen refugees do that in mine.

Poland and Hungary though, they just burn EU subsidies by funneling them into the pockets of the Prime Minister’s family and friends and smash any attempt at civilizational progress or a fair treatment and distribution of refugees across the Union.

geissi,
Mopswasser,

Who cares what a bunch of clowns did a couple of years ago in their own country? Not my problem.

But very telling that you had to dig deep.

I care about what happens in and around my home.

geissi,

you had to dig deep

A ten second internet search. Yes I’m super invested in this.

I care about what happens in and around my home.

Well by that criterion, nobody has ever burned a flag or smashed public property near my home, so everything is peachy.

Mopswasser,

Yeah perhaps you could have posted a better example than a years old story not pertinent to the issue at hand.

You draw your conclusions, I draw mine.

JasSmith,

Germany needs workers, not people who are illiterate and unlikely to ever work. Germany has accepted a LOT of people of the latter, and it is causing a lot of social unrest. If the current ruling parties don’t get a handle on things soon, the far right AfD will take power. There are only a few years left to turn this around.

albert180,

That’s not the case at all. Maybe trust hard facts instead of your gut feeling www.tagesschau.de/…/fluechtlinge-arbeit-114.html

JasSmith,

According to an analysis, more than half of the refugees who came to Germany in 2015 were employed in 2021.

Did you read it? This is horrific. Six years later, and barely more than half are working.

albert180,

You claimed

people who are illiterate and unlikely to ever work

That’s just not true. Also 41% are working a job for that they are overqualified, so much for illiterate.

Also, It’s a huge pain in the ass to get your degrees and titles recognised in Germany. Even Doctors returning from Switzerland have to wait several months up to a year to get their certificates recognised

JasSmith,

This is what I wrote:

Germany needs workers, not people who are illiterate and unlikely to ever work. Germany has accepted a LOT of people of the latter

I didn’t say “all”. I said “a lot.” According to your link, there are a lot of people who are not working.

Also, It’s a huge pain in the ass to get your degrees and titles recognised in Germany. Even Doctors returning from Switzerland have to wait several months up to a year to get their certificates recognised

This is a meme. Clearly most refugees are not doctors and engineers. I challenge you to provide a source.

albert180,

It was within the article, as for the Facharzt needing to wait so long to get it’s documents recognised, I’ve met him today in the university hospital

lichtmetzger,

Germany needs workers, not people who are illiterate and unlikely to ever work.

Germany wants highly-skilled workers, but pays them like interns. That won’t work. Either you let everyone in and train those people to be useful in your workforce or you only let the highly-skilled people in - but then you have to pay them what they’re worth.

You won’t get the best of both worlds, but it seems like a lot of our politicians have the mindset that we’re such an awesome country that everybody wants to come here.

The far-right politics of AfD/CDU/CSU are hindering our progress immensely. The population gets older and many people leave the workforce, but they still pretend like this can go on forever, without letting any migrants in. Good luck with that.

Don_alForno,

The integration of the 2015 wave of refugees into our labor market is progressing better than that of the 90s wave of refugees that came from former Yugoslavia did at the same time after immigration. They ARE working if we give them the opportunity. Expecting immediate 100% integration is not realistic.

Source

JasSmith,

Conversely, 45 percent of those who fled to Germany in 2015 have not yet entered the labor market.

I am not sure why you think this refutes my argument. It supports it. The employment rate is even worse for those who arrived after 2015, and is incredibly low for refugees of certain countries like Syria and Afghanistan.

For posterity, I am not claiming all refugees don’t work. I am claiming many do not work, and immigrants who do not work are making Germany’s social problems even worse.

Don_alForno,

I am not sure why you think this refutes my argument. It supports it.

No it doesn’t. They integrate FASTER than others who came before them who were supposedly far closer to our “shared values and culture” (i.e. “not muslims”), and society didn’t collapse when THOSE came. And the fact of the matter is this is while we’re actively preventing them from working by straight up forbidding it and not processing their requests for work permits.

Did you know: Syria ranks first among countries of origin of foreign doctors in Germany.

JasSmith,

They integrate FASTER than others who came before them who were supposedly far closer to our “shared values and culture” (i.e. “not muslims”), and society didn’t collapse when THOSE came.

You are attacking straw men. I neither claimed the problem is “Muslims” nor that making Germany poorer will collapse society. Please re-read my comments. To repeat myself, this is what I wrote, and your source confirmed that:

Germany needs workers, not people who are illiterate and unlikely to ever work. Germany has accepted a LOT of people of the latter, and it is causing a lot of social unrest.

Did you know that in most European countries, Syrians have some of the lowest rates of employment out of any country of origin? Unfortunately I can’t find Germany’s demographic stats (I would appreciate a source for yours). Here are the stats for Denmark.

tal,
@tal@lemmy.today avatar

I mean, Germany is getting those too, but there are only going to be so many of those on the market. You aren’t gonna go to, I dunno, Sudan and find a town fully populated by people with doctorates hell-bent on leaving.

PhlubbaDubba,

I think a better solution would be to fund pensions out of a sovereign wealth fund that’s not necessarily tied to youth productivity.

Stops youngins from feeling like they’re living in a geroncleptocracy, while also not tossing grandma out to live in the underpass

frostbiker, (edited )

What if we created one pension fund each year? Every person born that year contributes into that fund during their working years and withdraw from it in retirement. It seems like a solution that is fair to everybody, avoiding inter-generational wealth transfers.

PhlubbaDubba,

Well then it’s basically losing money against inflation

KmlSlmk64,
@KmlSlmk64@lemmy.world avatar

I don’t think that funds are kept in money. IIRC They are mostly kept in other means, so that they are at least somewhat sustainable against inflation. But that doesn’t mean that the above idea is good, or doesn’t have other flaws.

Spzi,

But that doesn’t mean that the above idea is good, or doesn’t have other flaws.

If you have more thoughts on this, could you spell them out?

KmlSlmk64,
@KmlSlmk64@lemmy.world avatar

I mean, you generally don’t want to tie up a lot of money, each year by year, meaning that you would have a lot of frozen capital. And capitalism (which also has some flaws, but right now we are using this system) depends on the flow of money/capital. Also managing these funds would make a lot of work / administration, because someone would have to manage what goes in and out and also in what form the funds to store in. And at the point of storing money from younger people, that is not being spent, whilst using money from older people, why not just have less money stored and use the money from the younger generation for the older ones. And you go full circle to the idea that we wanted to solve. Each system has its benefits and flaws, some of which are greater, which outweigh other, smaller ones. Sometimes the solution can be something completely different.

frostbiker,

Why would you assume that the fund would be kept in cash? That’s not how pension funds work.

PhlubbaDubba,

Because otherwise you run into the problem of having to get additional revenue from somewhere else.

The current problem is that there aren’t enough young people working well paying enough jobs to fund pensions, because if they aren’t funding them it’s just an account you throw money into and then draw out of later.

You can either provide an alternative source of additional funds or tell grandma it’s not your fault she put her money into a box instead of an investment vehicle to fund her retirement.

frostbiker,

I have described a system that would have prevented the problem in the first place while still providing the actuarial benefits of pooling resources.

I am not offering a solution for how to transition from the current system where the young pay for the old.

What I don’t like is the hyper-neoliberal approach where each person lives in an island and resources aren’t pooled at all, because it benefits the rich at the cost of the poor.

PhlubbaDubba,

It’s still losing money though, unless each cohort is able to operate it as an investment vehicle it’s no different than a generational shoebox in terms of what the money is doing while you’re waiting to pull out of it.

The point of a pension fund is for the ongoing contributions of currently working folks to bring in enough new capital that people withdrawing don’t feel the effects of their contributions from 40 years ago having lost value against inflation.

frostbiker, (edited )

The point of a pension fund is for the ongoing contributions of currently working folks to bring in enough new capital that people withdrawing don’t feel the effects of their contributions from 40 years ago having lost value against inflation.

No, that is not how long term investments work. Try reading about the subject and improve your own finances along the way. Investments typically grow faster than inflation, so the longer the original investment was made, the more money you have today.

PugJesus,
PugJesus avatar

"Immigrants bad!"

economy needs more workers

"Immigrants good!"

jk, this won't change opinions a bit.

PhlubbaDubba,

I mean it’s not like the Right Wing politicians are the ones touting the work load immigration assists in carrying

Nobsi,

“we need more people that we dont respect to do the jobs that we dont want to. At the same time we have to make it really hard for immigrants to live here”

taladar,

Also, we are going to complain that asylum seekers don’t work while explicitly prohibiting work for asylum seekers.

agrammatic, (edited )

It’s one of the most blatant self-made problems around migration that populists very disingenuously employ to paint their favourite picture of the “welfare queen” which has been a bold, racist lie since it was first used.

But I’m also a bit sceptical of how you can do this in a country without mandatory collective agreements in all sectors. Germany at least has a minimum wage, but that just means wage dumping can only go as low as 12 Euro per hour. Back in Cyprus, where the same question is constantly in the news, the most notorious anti-worker industry, the tourism sector, is begging for asylum seekers to be allowed in the jobs that they have most trouble filling with citizens, EU-residents, and work-permit holders. But they want to do so outside a collective agreement (one used to exist, but for various reasons is now dead-letter) and essentially without even the protection of a minimum wage (which Cyprus didn’t have until this year, and now it has an idiotic version of it which defines a monthly minimum wage without a limit to hours worked).

I think that the introduction of asylum seekers in the workforce should happen, but it should happen in tandem with a massive pro-union legislation change that will make collective agreements mandatory across the board (similar to the Swedish and Finnish models, as far as I understand those). That might require re-aligning the way unionism is understood in Germany from per-workplace to be per-industry.

taladar,

unionism

Not sure this is quite the right term here. At least in the UK this is about being for the Union of the countries making up the UK, not about worker’s unions and in Northern Ireland it is usually synonymous with one side of the conflict.

agrammatic,

Given that the article is not about the UK, I don’t see a good reason to reach for a UK-specific definition.

thanksforallthefish,

Bollocks. Even in the UK unionism has dual meanings, one about organised labour and one about the country. And the country meaning of unionist only gets mindshare in NI & Scotland. If you mention anything about unions/unionism in England people will assume organised labour.

CAVOK,

Can’t speak for Finland, although I think it’s the same, but collective agreements are certainly not mandatory in Sweden. Most companies over a certain size have them, but they don’t have to. Many, if not most, small businesses don’t.

I personally wouldn’t work for a company that didn’t have one.

IHaveTwoCows,

Hey, US!..is that you??

Nobsi,

The US doesn’t have a problem with finding good Immigrants. Even though the politics are horrible and misogynistic and you have to leave everything behind, smart people are moving to the US in droves. The greencard is still something desirable.
Meanwhile in Germany you earn noticably less, spend noticably more the people are noticably less nice and you have to do as much work for your ID here as you do in the US.

loutr,
@loutr@sh.itjust.works avatar

Don’t know about Germany, but here in France there are lots of IT workers from the Maghreb.

Nobsi,

And you need lots of IT? Youre not missing anything else?

loutr,
@loutr@sh.itjust.works avatar

Yeah we need (needed?) IT workers because until a few years ago, salaries for tech positions were really low in France compared to the rest of Europe and the US, so lots of French developers and techs emigrated to these countries.

Not sure about other industries, I work in IT so that’s what I know from personal experience.

noobdoomguy8658,

I worked with someone who moved to Germany/Austria/Switzerland (I can’t remember) from France to do IT work and pay a bit less taxes from this IT salary.

I do believe French when they say they need IT workers.

CookieJarObserver,

More people won’t fix shit.

theinspectorst,
theinspectorst avatar

Young people will fix shit. Western European societies have significantly ageing populations. That means they need to choose between three options to maintain their pension systems:

  1. Cut benefits for pensioners and/or increase the retirement age.

  2. Increase taxes for the young to pay for pensions for the old.

  3. Keep tax and benefit levels the same, but allow foreigners to move to Western Europe where they can work and pay taxes.

1 and 2 both have huge intergenerational consequences - and bluntly, having seen how the baby boom generation have pulled the ladder up behind them, I have no great urge to pay taxes through the teeth for the rest of my working life to fund their cushy retirements. 3 hurts nobody and benefits everybody - it's a no-brainer.

RedPandaRaider,

What about a fourth option of reducing the amount of old people?

Besides that the only feasible policy would be temporarily cutting retirement benefits. If it’s permanent it would never be accepted by anyone and neither be fair.

More immigration simply delays the issue a few decades into the future.

Zacryon,

Reduce the amount of old people? What do you mean?

“Congratz on turning 65! Here is a sweet little cyanide pill. Take it and now go die already! We would like to keep our money, please.”

Regarding cutting retirement benefits, I’d argue that this should be a matter of redistribution (few get a high pension, and a lot of people can’t live from their pension and are currently depending on additional financial aid) and merging the two class pension system into a single one.

More targeted immigration for younger people can indeed help to tackle the reverse pyramid demographics in Germany.

RedPandaRaider,

No of course you don’t give people cyanide pills. But it natural corrections are avoided like by war or by diseases like covid, we need to do something.

A humane way would be to simply cease life prolonging treatments from a certain age onwards. Do we really need to waste resources on someone who is over 80 just to let them live one or two more years? It would make more sense to instead make their death as painless as possible. Of course that doesn’t mean that we shouldn’t treat them at all. A broken arm still should be treated. But maybe don’t keep them alive on respirators for months of years when there’s no chance of improvement.

The only way the pension system can be fixed would be to radically alter it. One of the things necessary is something you already mentioned in a way. Setting a limit on how much pensions someone can receive. But more importantly anything you pay into the pension system via taxes should be kept in the system for years or decades. Whether that money is invested for greater profits or simply left to accumulate interest. Essentially have people pay in for themselves. That way the money has decades to increase. Any excess profit can be used to increase the pensions who people who have earned too little for their own pension.

And again, immigration won’t fix anything. It does not fix the demographics pyramid. It simply adds even more people that in the future themselves will have a claim to pensions. Then you will again need even more people. This would require an ever increasing population when what we really need is a decreasing population.

Zacryon,

But it natural corrections are avoided like by war or by diseases like covid

Yeah, since war and covid are “natural corrections”…

Dude, what the fuck? You are actively advocating for the death of people. I share a certain morbid enthusiasm about humanity, but what you suggest is simply cruel and there is so much what I find wrong (based on my ethical framework) about what you said regarding this.

A humane way would be to simply cease life prolonging treatments from a certain age onwards.

How old are you? If you are about 30 or already above, live up to your suggestions and go ahead dying, because that’s what the life expectancy probably was in pre-modern times. Got vaccinated against something? Forget it. Ever got a fever and needed antipyretics? Enjoyed food and water, free from pathogens? You should’ve been dead. Where do you draw the line? There are plenty of 80+ year olds who are still kicking and enjoying life. Heck, there are even more fit 100+ year olds than decades ago.

Do we really need to waste resources

It’s not a waste if we can ensure by that way that people enjoy a long and fullfilling life. Everyone who lives should continue to be able to do so, because almost everyone who is alive wants to live. Not you and not I have got anything to say against that. Do you really want to live in a world where we kill our elders at some point because of financial concerns? How would you feel about that if someone comes to you on your 80th birthday with a death pill?

But maybe don’t keep them alive on respirators for months of years when there’s no chance of improvement.

That’s the only thing in your misanthropic perspective which I understand and can even share to a certain degree. You are missing the complexity of that topic here and I don’t want to dive into that right now. So let’s just say that the vast majority of 80+ age old people are not on life support and we are simply talking about the pension system.

Regarding your pension suggestion: Yeah doesn’t sound so incredibly disgusting then killing our elders, and I don’t disagree. So that might be something worth to investigate.

immigration won’t fix anything. It does not fix the demographics pyramid. It simply adds even more people that in the future themselves will have a claim to pensions. Then you will again need even more people

Immigration is only one foot in an approach to mitigate this problem. As far as I see it, ideal demographics would have - at the limit of sustainability - a rectangular shape, about as many young people as old people with birth rates matching the death rates. The birth rates in Germany are declining since several decades. I don’t know the detailed list of reasons, but one of the reasons I know is that having children is not sufficiently attractive. (This again has several influencing factors, like societal, financial, time-wise, … .) So it’s obvious that it’s very important to fix this structural problem. Making having and raising children attractive again. But, even if Germany would be able to establish the necessary circumstances to achieve this in no-time, it still takes at least about 20 years until those newborns are ready to contribute. And that’s where immigration comes in. Germans still need to fill those crucial gaps to continue living by the standards they are living in. You can’t magically create those people from nowhere. So you need to draw them in. And since killing older people is 100% off the table, other measures are required. Increasing the retirement age is one option, but that is met with outcry. Most don’t want that. Immigration is another option. Meanwhile fixing the birth rate problem is another important problem, which has to be tackled. Redistributing wealth among the people is also another option. Doing investments with pension money, somehow like you suggested it, might also be a good idea. And so on… There are several ideas how to solve this, but I’m pretty sure that immigration can’t be avoided to achieve that goal as soon as possible.

RedPandaRaider,

Are personal insults and bad faith arguements you have in regards to an overpopulation of the eldery? Fact of the matter is that humans are getting too old. The majority of people past 80 are not healthy anymore. Neither can or should they be expected to still work a job. Raising the retirement age is out of the question.

So many personal attacks trying to beit me into “hah gotcha!” moments and strawmen. But I gotta disappoint you. No I don’t want to live past 80 personally. I’d be completely fine with dying at that age. I’d be fine with being denied life prolonging treatments. It seems to do not even seem to bother argue my position. I specifically said we should stop life prolonging treatments at a certain point, not actively kill people or deny them any treatment for not life threatening health concerns.

There is nothing misanthropic about my views, nor am I making them out of financial concerns, but out of concerns for human society and its prosperity. Ever thought beyond just pensions and healthcare systems? How an ever aging society will lead to a social standstill and eventually societal stagnation? Or how older people hoard wealth? The majority of housing and any monetary wealth is in the hands of the older generations and until they die it will not reach any generations after them. Not unless we have an entire social revolution regarding property and wealth.

Immigration is only one foot in an approach to mitigate this problem. As far as I see it, ideal demographics would have - at the limit of sustainability - a rectangular shape, about as many young people as old people with birth rates matching the death rates. The birth rates in Germany are declining since several decades. I don’t know the detailed list of reasons, but one of the reasons I know is that having children is not sufficiently attractive. (This again has several influencing factors, like societal, financial, time-wise, … .) So it’s obvious that it’s very important to fix this structural problem. Making having and raising children attractive again. But, even if Germany would be able to establish the necessary circumstances to achieve this in no-time, it still takes at least about 20 years until those newborns are ready to contribute.

Several things to unpack here. You’re coming from a position where you view it as necessary to keep the population growing or at least at the same size. Unless we fall beyond replacement levels for humanity as a whole, that is no real issue. It’s only problematic for our systems built on permanent growth. Degrowth itself isn’t an issue, it even found more and more advocates over the recent years.

Regarding birthrates it’s a too complex issue for current governments to handle within our current system. Children are already subsidised a ton by the state in Germany. Something that people without children (whether willingly or involuntarily childless) already have to pay for via excess taxes. Just subsidising children more will not fix the issue. It’s a wider issue where working class people at large do not make enough money anymore nowadays. Any other issues can be traced back to that. Take for example the issue of a lack of childcaring services and teachers. If they paid more to their teachers and employess, they would not have a lack of workforce. Too much has been redistributed away to the ruling class since the 90s.

Zacryon, (edited )

What insults?

Fact of the matter is that humans are getting too old.

What is your definition of “too old”?

The majority of people past 80 are not healthy anymore.

It would be good to have some numbers on this. I can’t look for some right now.

However, what are your standards for “being healthy”?
Having manageable diseases is not equivalent to being connected to and depending on life support machines.

Neither can or should they be expected to still work a job.

I would make such a decision not generally, but on an individual basis. Incorporating the fitness of everyone seems fair. What are your reasons for why they shouldn’t be expected to continue working for a couple of years?

So many personal attacks trying to beit me into “hah gotcha!” moments and strawmen.

Yeah, sure. It’s all personal and not regarded to your views and opinions which I find shitty. /s
When do people start to realize that respecting a person is something different than finding their opinions bad?
To make it clear, I still respect you as a person, but I don’t agree with some of your views. Even more, I actively find that those really, really suck.
If you felt insulted as a person, that was never my intention. So please clarify where you felt like I insulted you, so I can react to that accordingly.

No I don’t want to live past 80 personally. I’d be completely fine with dying at that age.

Alright, no one is stopping you from that. But I’m pretty sure that most people would like to stay alive.
And I find it wrong to deny them this just because it is appears challenging to care for them right now while upkeeping the standards of living in a nation like Germany.

I specifically said we should stop life prolonging treatments at a certain point, not actively kill people or deny them any treatment for not life threatening health concerns.

You specifically said:

What about a fourth option of reducing the amount of old people?

“Reducing the amount of old people” sounds pretty active to me. Denying them treatment which could cure their diseases or upkeep a high quality of life is an active decision. That’s deliberate acceptance of suffering and death. Letting someone die, because they got a morbidity after reaching a certain – almost arbitrary – age, may less be an active killing, but it’s still negligent homicide.

Also, regarding the treatment of life threatening health issues, a lot of diseases may start harmless and become life threatening when left untreated. Say an infection of a wound for example. May be harmless at first, sometimes the body is able to fight it off by itself, but sometimes it is not and needs support. And then there are diseases which are already present before someone reaches pension age.

Also, aging and death itself can be understood as a disease, which humanity is fighting since even before they were humans.

Where do you draw the line?

There is nothing misanthropic about my views, nor am I making them out of financial concerns

No? Talking about pension and suggesting we should, as you put it, “reduce the amount of old people” has nothing to do with finance?
A few lines later you say in the same paragraph:

Or how older people hoard wealth? The majority of housing and any monetary wealth is in the hands of the older generations

To sum up, “I don’t want to let old people die for financial reasons, but I want to let people die for financial reasons”.
Contradicting much, doesn’t it?

but out of concerns for human society and its prosperity

Besides the matter that, “prosperity” can also be understood as a financial matter, could you please clarify what you mean with “human society and its prosperity” in the context of our discussion? That’s so abstract that it could mean anything.

Regarding wealth and housing, referring also to this:

The majority of housing and any monetary wealth is in the hands of the older generations and until they die it will not reach any generations after them.

Due to the fucked up inheritance laws in Germany, society as a whole does not really profit from the death of those old people, because those are bequesting it almost tax free to their descendants. So just a small group of rich people stay rich and get richer. Even if they die and their younger descendants take their place, most people won’t profit from that in any way.

Not unless we have an entire social revolution regarding property and wealth.

I’m not sure about the revolution part, but at least we seem to agree on the importance of redistributing wealth somehow. That could also help with the aforementioned inheritance issues.

You’re coming from a position where you view it as necessary to keep the population growing or at least at the same size.

Yes. To a certain level I do.

Unless we fall beyond replacement levels for humanity as a whole, that is no real issue.

I’m not talking about humanity as a whole, but about the population in Germany.

It’s only problematic for our systems built on permanent growth.

That’s the lesser issue here, I’d say. It’s currently a problematic topic in Germany, because there are a lot more old people than young people. This will lead to a significant decrease of living standards and probably bring along a bunch of other problems, since few younger people need to support a lot of elderly.

Degrowth itself isn’t an issue, it even found more and more advocates over the recent years.

You may also find me on the degrowth side often. But please, by other means than death.
Brith rates worldwide (as a whole, not necessarily individually per country) are declining by the way.

it’s a too complex issue for current governments to handle within our current system

There is no societal issue a government can’t handle. That’s the whole purpose of having a government.

Children are already subsidised a ton by the state in Germany.

And yet there is talk about child poverty since years. It seems what you view as “subsidised a ton” differs a lot from what I, parent associations and a bunch of other instutions criticise. It’s something, but sadly not a ton and not enough.

Just subsidising children more will not fix the issue.

Yes. But it will help until the structural problems, the causes for these problems, are fixed.

I basically agree with you concerning the rest of your birthrate paragraph.

dumdum666,

The main problem in Germany is, is that there are different pension systems for privileged classes (Politicians, Civil Servants, Doctors, Lawyers, Bankers) and the REST. The privileged classes are fighting tooth and nail to prevent THEIR pension services included in a singular pension system. Another problem is that only the workers are paying into the system - if you earn income from any other sources like being a landlord or owning vast wealth and accrue interest - that income does not count for the pension fees.

This is just a very short abstract and it doesn’t really capture the complexity.

As you have written that they could lower the pension… the pension by 2035 will be 43% of your net income before taxes. The average German pension is about €1500 per month (those privileged classes I talked about before, have multiples of the average German pension)

Don_alForno,

What you mention are indeed major problems, but the main problem is still the ageing demographic. Even everybody paying into one pot won’t fix the mismatch between payers and recipients we’re going into in the coming years.

IHaveTwoCows,

Maybe the boomers can learn from their parents and throw the old people into incinerators every Tuesday

Zacryon,

No.

Andreas,
@Andreas@feddit.dk avatar

And what happens when those foreign workers in Solution #3 age, retire and need pension payouts…? Just keep hiring more and more foreign workers? Besides, “benefits everybody” is only from an national economic perspective. From the cultural, social and personal economic perspective, having a huge influx of foreigners in your country is terrible.

I don’t think foreign labor is completely off the mark but there has to be guards against them costing more money than they contribute to the system, which means strict culture, skill and income requirements for permanent migration.

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