Young
graduates from Greece, Spain and Portugal head north as home employment
prospects remain bleak
Frankfurt, home of the celebrated book fair, is a magnet for Greek migrants seeking work.
Unemployment rates continue to break records in the
eurozone, and there is little chance of an improvement this year. The crisis in
the jobs market across Europe is hitting young people hardest, setting in
motion new migratory patterns between Mediterranean countries and the north.
Germany stands out as an exception. Despite sluggish growth
in the EU's largest economy, unemployment is steady: good news that won't fall
on deaf ears. In the past two years, the net number of people entering Germany
rose from 128,000 to 340,000. German businesses are drawing on a fresh source
of cheap, qualified labour from Greece and Spain.
After five years in higher education, Paschalis Lampridis,
25, left Greece – and its labour market devastated by recession and austerity –
and headed for Frankfurt, the business capital of a country where companies are
still producing, investing and, above all, hiring. That was a year ago. Now,
working as a computer programmer for the tyre firm Continental, Lampridis
refuses to indulge in nostalgia. Obviously, he sometimes dreams of sea and sun.
The winter in Frankfurt has been overcast and persistently cold, but, he says,
"There was no future for me at home."
The statistics endorse this view. Unemployment is soaring in
Greece and Spain, with more than one in four out of work. Youth is bearing the
brunt of the downturn, with more than half the active population under 25
jobless. Meanwhile, the German labour market is buoyant. According to figures
published by the federal employment agency in February, unemployment is steady
at 6.9%.
Tens of thousands of young people from southern Europe have
followed the same path as Lampridis. In the first nine months of 2012, 27,000
Spaniards, 26,300 Greeks and almost 10,000 Portuguese moved to Germany. The
Germans have already found a name for them, neue Gastarbeiter (new guest
workers), a throwback to the immigrants who flocked to West Germany in the
1960s, leaving their homes in Turkey and southern Europe to staff the machines
of the economic miracle.
However, the new generation differs from its predecessors.
Today's migrants are younger and better qualified. Lampridis had to overcome
his "terror" of a difficult language and settle in. "To begin
with, I could only understand about a third of what people were saying,"
he says. "But they know the value of good work here."
Elena Dolaptsi, 23, is a fully qualified childminder. She
has travelled the same road as her parents did 10 years earlier, but in the
opposite direction. Homesick after years of casual labour in Frankfurt they
finally returned home to Drama, in the Greek region of east Macedonia. At the
time, the Greek economy was in better shape whereas Germany, with almost 5
million unemployed, was the "sick man of Europe".
That has all changed now. Battered by the current crisis,
the lifeblood of Greece is ebbing away. "If I'd wanted to stay, my only
option would have been to settle on an island and make do with €400 [$520] a
month in wages," Dolaptsi explains in her still hesitant German. So she
chose to try her luck in Germany. She arrived in January and started work in a
nursery in a small town near Frankfurt. To find a job, she answered seven
adverts and received six positive responses.
German business is thriving but the population is growing
old, resulting in an increasingly acute shortage of labour. The country is
desperately looking for qualified personnel to staff its factories, research
laboratories, hospitals and kindergartens. According to experts, at least
400,000 newcomers (in the net migration balance) will be needed every year to
compensate for ageing and to maintain current economic trends.
Southern Europe has a massive reserve of young talent with
poor prospects. The Frankfurt area, on the other hand, is prosperous – thanks
to its banks, car and chemical industries but also its trade fairs, where
valuable deals are settled. In a drive to attract the personnel it needs, the
Hesse region finalised a partnership agreement with the Madrid area last
autumn. The scheme includes crash courses in German for people less concerned
about the finer points of the language than with technical and financial
vocabulary. But the partnership will also bring Spanish apprentices to local
firms. A website has gone live to help newcomers complete administrative
formalities and find lodgings.
German business leaders have taken to attending job fairs in
Spain. Invenio is a medium-sized German operation – with a workforce of 580 –
that specialises in outsourcing its engineers to larger companies. Currently
enjoying rapid growth, it has had to turn down contracts for lack of sufficient
human resources. So it too has started looking for staff in Spain. In recent
months, Invenio has hired about 20 Spanish graduates and intends to find more.
"They are highly motivated and bring a different outlook with them,"
says the company's CEO, Kai Wissler.
But things do not always go quite so smoothly for these
economic refugees. Many land in a foreign country with no money, work,
qualifications or connections. Quite a few knock on the door of Athenagoras Ziliaskopoulos,
the head of Frankfurt's Greek Orthodox community. They are looking for advice,
a decent translation or maybe even a roof over their heads. Since 2009, the
priest has provided emergency lodging in the church for hundreds of his
compatriots.
"A lot of them are under some sort of
misconception," Ziliaskopoulos says. "They think they can find work
just by stopping someone in the street." He usually firmly suggests that
the poorest applicants go home, paying for a bus or plane ticket out of community
funds. He reckons the only ones who stand a chance are mobile and adaptable
graduates, who ideally speak several languages. Indeed, in their case exile is
probably the only solution, he adds with a sigh.
But is Germany not in danger of alienating its partners in
the south by attracting their best brains? "You mustn't imagine we're
happy about the situation there," says Wissler. "One day these young
people will be able to go home with the benefit of the experience they have
gained here, rather than having to endure years of unemployment."
Lampridis has no plans to return to Greece in the near
future, unless he is sent there by a foreign company with pay on a par with
German earnings … like an expatriate in his home country.
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