The Limits of the German Promised Land
SEP 29, 2015
MUNICH
– Migrants seeking to escape poverty and war are flowing into Europe by
the hundreds of thousands. They are still mostly being welcomed, but
the capacity of the reception centers is fast reaching its limits. To
staunch the flow of migrants over the Balkan route, Hungary has imposed
controls on its borders – and was promptly followed by Germany, Austria,
Slovakia, Croatia, Slovenia, the Czech Republic, the Netherlands, and
Poland.
Germany is the
migrants’ most favored destination. So far this year, half of all asylum
applications in the European Union have been filed there, although the
country accounts for only 16% of the EU’s population. By September,
Germany had probably received some 400,000 applications or more, with
the dramatic increase in migration flows since summer and before the
reinstatement of border controls expected to push the number of
asylum-seekers to 800,000 this year.
Moreover, regular
immigration to Germany could again reach the 400,000 mark, as in 2014.
The total would represent net immigration of 1.5% of the resident
population – an extremely high proportion by historical and
international standards.
The reason for the
migrants’ strong preference for Germany is that the country, together
with Sweden, has Europe’s most liberal asylum system and allocates
particularly high levels of funding to accommodate the newcomers.
Between €1,000 ($1,120) and €1,200 per person per month is being
transferred to the municipalities to cover the costs of accommodating
them. The value of the benefits that the immigrants receive in Germany
is a multiple of the wages they can earn in their home countries (if
they manage to find a job there at all).
The Dublin Regulation,
according to which the first EU country that a migrant reaches is
obliged to register and process the migrant’s application, has long been
disregarded. Greece and Italy are simply waving the refugees on.
Germany accepted, with much fanfare, a large number of unregistered
refugees from Hungary and offered them a warm welcome. This decision
arguably tempted so many more refugees from the Arab countries that soon
thereafter Germany was forced to impose border controls.
What the German
government had not reckoned with is that every refugee who manages to
make it to Germany immediately texts the good news back to the home
country, fueling a fresh wave of migrants. The UN refugee camps in the
countries surrounding Syria are thus being gradually relocated to
Germany.
Only a fraction of
asylum-seekers’ applications are ultimately approved, because most
applicants are not politically persecuted but simply economic migrants (?).
In the first half of 2015, for instance, only about one-quarter of
applicants came from Syria and Iraq, a significant proportion of whom
had already found shelter in the UN camps in or around those countries.
But the proportion of Syrian refugees subsequently ballooned quickly, in
part because the news spread that Germany approves most Syrian
applications.
If an application is
successful, a refugee has the right to bring along his or her family
members as well. Frequently, Arab families send their minors to Germany (? EU?)
in the not-unjustified hope that they will obtain the right for other
family members to follow later. Germany will have to deal with the
consequences of this refugee wave for years to come.
In order to
distribute the burden more equitably, Germany tried to have a European
quota system instituted to allocate applicants among the EU’s member
countries. But Germany’s EU partners (?) rejected this as “moral
imperialism.”
Germany thus failed
to have a system adopted that would have provided it with some relief.
Instead, a quickly convened summit has now agreed on a limited quota
system that will cover barely 120,000 people, aimed at providing relief
to Hungary, Italy, and Greece; it will bring a further 31,000 refugees
to Germany.
In order to avert
chaos, Germany has no choice but to impose restrictions. Among the most
urgently needed steps is to develop the capacity to distinguish quickly –
and ideally at the border – between refugees (who face political
persecution) and economic migrants. Germany’s Federal Office for
Migration and Refugees could set up border outposts to clear baseless
asylum claims and send the rejected applicants, in accordance with the
Dublin Regulation, back to the first safe country they reached.
This would allow
Germany to concentrate on the task at hand: providing those granted
refugee status the schooling and language lessons they will need to
allow them to find employment as quickly as possible.
Hans-Werner Sinn, Professor of Economics
and Public Finance at the University of Munich, is President of the Ifo
Institute for Economic Research and serves on the German economy
ministry’s Advisory Council.
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