• Govt. Stats Reveal 1/3 of Young People in Germany Have Foreign Backgrou

    From Doctor Fill@21:1/5 to All on Sat May 24 10:38:38 2025
    XPost: alt.politics.immigration, alt.survival, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh

    The Great Replacement is moving along as planned by the people whom
    cannot be mentioned. No wonder "they" want to ban AfD.

    https://www.breitbart.com/europe/2025/05/24/one-third-of-young-people-in-germany-foreign-say-demographic-stats/

    A quarter of people in Germany have “immigration history,” rising to as many as a third among the youngest cohort, but Germany’s restrictive definition of what constitutes a migrant may mask even greater numbers
    of foreign-heritage residents.

    The Federal Statistical Office (Destatis) published a demographical
    bulletin this week, noting that, for the first time, the proportion of
    people who are either migrants themselves or born to two migrant parents
    is one-quarter of the national population. This works out at 21.2
    million people, an increase of four per cent in a year, or 873,000
    people from 2023 to 2024.

    Destatis notes migrant communities in Germany tend to skew younger, and
    in the 20-39 cohort, a full third of people living in Germany have that “immigration history”.

    While this rate of demographic change is significant, Destatis’s categorisation of its data may conceal further change. Only
    first-generation migrants and those born to two migrant parents are
    counted in the headline figures, and those born to one migrant parent
    and one German parent are excluded.

    “They are therefore not considered part of the population with an
    immigration history,” the nation’s official statistician said.


    Single-migrant parent individuals will account for a further 4.1 million
    people in Germany in 2024. Per the Destatis figures, accounting for all
    first- and second-generation migrants, this puts the total “immigration history” population of Germany at 30.7 per cent.

    Depending on the degree to which various migrant communities have
    successfully integrated into German society, and given Germany’s
    Gastarbeiter (guest worker) programme — a misnomer given very few ever
    return home — is now 70 years old, the statistics are not designed to
    capture individuals who may have four migrant grandparents, for instance.

    The rate of immigration has surged in recent years. Destatis said 6.5
    million people arrived in Germany since 2015, the first year of the
    European Migrant Crisis. In the most recent cohort of arrivals, the top countries of origin are Ukraine, Syria, and Turkey.

    Meanwhile, in a development reported by Germany’s Die Welt newspaper,
    the most productive source of migration to Germany, in terms of economic engagement and tax revenue, is showing signs of drying up. Describing
    migrants from Eastern Europe as “a key pillar of the German labour
    market,” the report notes that the number of arrivals is plummeting,
    down two-thirds in recent years.

    The paper noted that, because of the decline in this source of migrant
    labour, which the German government believes it needs to survive, the
    German Economic Institute advises attempting to attract more immigrants
    from non-European countries.

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