Germany’s center-right parties are toughening their attitude to , potentially causing another damaging split in Chancellor Olaf Scholz’s government.
A leading member of the smallest party in the chancellor’s center-left coalition, the neoliberal Free Democratic Party (FDP), has insisted that refugees should no longer receive the basic unemployment benefit, known as Bürgergeld, or citizen’s income.
“Newly arrived war refugees from Ukraine should no longer receive a citizen’s income, but should fall under the ,” FDP General Secretary Bijan Djir-Sarai told the tabloid Bild newspaper on Monday. This, he suggested, would force more Ukrainians to find a job.
“We have a shortage of labor everywhere – in the restaurant and construction industries, for example, or in the care sector,” Djir-Sarai added. “We should no longer be using taxpayers’ money to finance unemployment, but instead we need to ensure that people get jobs.”
Both Scholz’s center-left Social Democrats (SPD) and his other coalition partner, the Green Party, have rejected the idea.
‘Naked populism’
The FDP’s proposal got immediate support from the opposition conservative Christian Democrats (CDU), who are the FDP’s coalition partners in several previous German governments.
Around 1.3 million people with Ukrainian citizenship are living in Germany, according to government figures for March 2024, most of whom were women and children. According to the Federal Interior Ministry, around 260,000 of them are Ukrainian men between the ages of 18 and 60.
“It doesn’t make sense to talk about supporting Ukraine in the best way we can and at the same time to pay for Ukrainians who have deserted their country,” Brandenburg’s CDU Interior Minister Michael Stübgen told the newspaper network RND.
But the respected German economist Marcel Fratzscher dismissed the FDP’s demand as “naked populism.” “No one will be better off, no one will have a single euro more, if Germany treats worse and cuts their benefits,” Fratzscher, the president of the German Institute for Economic Research (DIW), told RND on Tuesday.
The government’s spokespeople swiftly clarified that the FDP’s stance did not reflect that of Chancellor Olaf Scholz, telling a regular press conference that there were no plans to change the help offered to Ukrainian refugees. In fact, as they pointed out, EU interior ministers agreed just last week to extend Ukrainian refugees’ special protection status until 2026.
This status prevents Ukrainians from having to go through a lengthy asylum procedure upon arrival, they are free to choose their place of residence, and gives them the immediate right to social benefits, education, and a work permit.
Ukrainian refugees are only entitled to social benefits if their income and, if applicable, their assets are not sufficient to cover the cost of living.
Access to the labor market
Alexander (name changed), a 37-year-old Ukrainian who spent about a year living on the citizen’s income in Berlin, said he could understand the sentiment behind the FDP and CDU’s calls, but that the Bürgergeld had been vital to helping him find his feet in a very dark period of his life.
“When I came here I was totally lost, I was mentally lost,” he told DW. “Then we went to the Job Center, and we had the payments, we had the support from them. In my case everything went pretty smoothly.”
Receiving Bürgergeld — currently €563 ($603) a month for single people — also meant Alexander, a music producer and sound designer who had a successful business in Ukraine, had access to job counselling and help finding a German language course, all of which ultimately allowed him to get off state support within a year. Under the Asylum Seekers Benefits Act, he would have received just €354 a month, and no help from the Job Center.
Alexander’s story is not unique, according to research done by Kseniia Gatskova, of the Institute for Employment Research (IAB), who coordinated a long-term survey on Ukrainian war refugees in Germany. “Of course, the citizen’s income is important — it allows people to cope with everyday life,” she told DW. “But integration means much more — refugees need extensive integration measures: for example, language courses and advice in job centers.”
According to the Federal Employment Agency in March 2024, over 700,000 Ukrainians were receiving the basic benefits for jobseekers. This included 501,000 people who were classified as fit to work and 217,000 who were not – these were mostly children.
Some 185,000 Ukrainian refugees are employed and paying social security contributions. In October 2023 a study by the Friedrich Ebert Foundation revealed that integration of Ukrainian war refugees into the German labor market was lagging behind that of other EU countries: While just 18% of Ukrainian refugees had found a job in Germany, in Poland, the Czech Republic and Denmark the figure was two thirds or more.
Gatskova stressed that the last two years had shown that the rate of Ukrainians who had found work had grown. “They are very keen to integrate into the labor market — over 90% of refugees from Ukraine want to work in Germany,” she said. “How are people supposed to finance themselves during the period when they have not yet learned the German language, have not had their qualifications recognized and have not yet found a job?”
Not every Ukrainian wants to fight
Germany’s aging population means the country is becoming increasingly dependent on foreign labor in several sectors. But what troubles many critics is that many of the Ukrainian refugees are, like Alexander, men of fighting age — though the uncomfortable truth is that many Ukrainian men don’t want to fight.
“How people perceive war here, and how a guy from a country where there is war perceives it is very different,” said Alexander. “I think if a country promises help, and people need help, that country still needs to help people. In my case, I feel indebted to Germany, and I’m really thankful for that, and I’m going to be paying it back with my taxes.”
“I think supporting people when they come to a country for a year or two is pretty good — it’s an investment in future labor power,” he added. “That will help your country to grow. Another question is: How long should you support these people? For, me it should be one, two, three years maximum.”
Researchers like Gatskova believe that, in general, the system needs to be reformed to help more refugees find work, whether they’re Ukrainian or not: “We are calling for the removal of institutional barriers to labor market integration,” she said. “The longer asylum procedures, work bans, and mobility restrictions have a negative impact on labor market integration.
Edited by Rina Goldenberg
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