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WORKING IN DENMARK

Can Denmark solve its labour shortage by finding workers in Denmark?

Denmark’s employment minister recently said she wanted to solve the country’s labour shortage by engaging more young people who are currently out of work, instead of allowing more foreign workers. Is that realistic?

Can Denmark solve its labour shortage by finding workers in Denmark?
Denmark’s employment minister Ane Halsboe-Jørgensen wants to fill labour shortages with unemployed young people. Can it be done? Photo: Emil Helms/Ritzau Scanpix

Denmark’s employment minister, Ane Halsboe-Jørgensen, is not in favour of easing immigration rules to make it easier for companies to recruit foreign labour.

In an interview with newspaper Politiken earlier this week, Social Democrat Halsboe-Jørgensen said she was against allowing more foreign labour in Denmark, arguing it could have a negative impact on society.

Businesses and other political parties – including partners in the coalition government – have come out strongly in favour of more foreign labour to address Denmark’s ongoing shortage in many sectors, but the minister said she would prefer young Danes who are currently out of work to be drawn upon to help ease the shortage.

READ ALSO: Danish employment minister against easing immigration rules for labour

There are currently some 43,000 young people in Denmark who are neither working or enrolled in education, she told Politiken.

But that number is not enough on its own to fill all the job vacancies Denmark is likely to see in the coming years, according to an expert who spoke to broadcaster DR.

“It is not sufficient to be able to close the gap with that group and many have nothing like the skills the labour market needs. So that group is not the solution on its own,” Thomas Bredgaard, a professor in labour market research at Aalborg University, said to DR.

That view was also taken by Sabina Pultz, labour market researcher at Roskilde University, also in comments to DR.

“Analyses show that 80 percent of the approximately 43,000 young people have a relatively simple explanation for why they are not at work. That might, for example, be that they are taking a year out or are between education programmes. And then there’s the 20 percent who have more long-term problems,” she said.

The Confederation of Danish Industry (DI) also said that relying on unemployed young people will not be enough.

“Foreign labour is an obvious part of the solution to the challenges. It is sensible to also look at young people, but I don’t think young people comprise a large potential alone,” DI’s deputy director Steen Nielsen told DR.

Bredgaard said that many people not in work or education often had problems that presented barriers to their employment. They may not have had good experiences in the education system and may therefore be unqualified.

Others might be suffering from mental health challenges or other wellbeing difficulties, he said.

Efforts by local municipalities to help young people into work have already had mixed results, he noted.

“[Local authorities] have tried a lot of different things and have had mixed experiences with it. But there have also been things that have worked, that should be extended further,” he said.

He also said that existing labour in Denmark could supplement foreign labour in filling vacancies.

“That could be a later withdrawal from the labour market, getting more to go from part-time to full-time, and getting young people into jobs faster after their studies,” he said.

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IMMIGRATION

‘Shift to the right’: How European nations are tightening migration policies

The success of far-right parties in elections in key European countries is prompting even centrist and left-wing governments to tighten policies on migration, creating cracks in unity and sparking concern among activists.

'Shift to the right': How European nations are tightening migration policies

With the German far right coming out on top in two state elections earlier this month, the socialist-led national Berlin government has reimposed border controls on Western frontiers that are supposed to see freedom of movement in the European Union’s Schengen zone.

The Netherlands government, which includes the party of Dutch far-right leader Geert Wilders, announced on Wednesday that it had requested from Brussels an opt-out from EU rules on asylum, with Prime Minister Dick Schoof declaring that there was an asylum “crisis”.

Meanwhile, new British Prime Minister Keir Starmer of the left-wing Labour Party paid a visit to Rome for talks with Italian counterpart Georgia Meloni, whose party has neo-fascist roots, to discuss the strategies used by Italy in seeking to reduce migration.

Far-right parties performed strongly in June European elections, coming out on top in France, prompting President Emmanuel Macron to call snap elections which resulted in right-winger Michel Barnier, who has previously called for a moratorium on migration, being named prime minister.

We are witnessing the “continuation of a rightward shift in migration policies in the European Union,” said Jerome Vignon, migration advisor at the Jacques Delors Institute think-tank.

It reflected the rise of far-right parties in the European elections in June, and more recently in the two regional elections in Germany, he said, referring to a “quite clearly protectionist and conservative trend”.

Strong message

“Anti-immigration positions that were previously the preserve of the extreme right are now contaminating centre-right parties, even centre-left parties like the Social Democrats” in Germany, added Florian Trauner, a migration specialist at the Vrije Universiteit Brussel, the Dutch-speaking university in Brussels.

While the Labour government in London has ditched its right-wing Conservative predecessor administration’s plan to send asylum seekers to Rwanda, there is clearly interest in a deal Italy has struck with Albania to detain and process migrants there.

Within the European Union, Cyprus has suspended the processing of asylum applications from Syrian applicants, while laws have appeared authorising pushbacks at the border in Finland and Lithuania.

Under the pretext of dealing with “emergency” or “crisis” situations, the list of exemptions and deviations from the common rules defined by the European Union continues to grow.

All this flies in the face of the new EU migration pact, agreed only in May and coming into force in 2026.

In the wake of deadly attacks in Mannheim and most recently Solingen blamed on radical Islamists, German Chancellor Olaf Scholz’s government also expelled 28 Afghans back to their home country for the first time since the Taliban takeover of Kabul.

Such gestures from Germany are all the more symbolic given how the country since World War II has tried to turn itself into a model of integration, taking in a million refugees, mainly Syrians in 2015-2016 and then more than a million Ukrainian exiles since the Russian invasion.

Germany is sending a “strong message” to its own public as well as to its European partners, said Trauner.

The migratory pressure “remains significant” with more than 500,000 asylum applications registered in the European Union for the first six months of the year, he said.

‘Climate on impunity’

Germany, which received about a quarter of them alone, criticises the countries of southern Europe for allowing migrants to circulate without processing their asylum applications, but southern states denounce a lack of solidarity of the rest of Europe.

The moves by Germany were condemned by EU allies including Greece and Poland, but Scholz received the perhaps unwelcome accolade of praise from Hungarian right-wing Prime Minister Viktor Orban, Moscow’s closest friend in the European Union, when he declared “welcome to the club”.

The EU Commission’s failure to hold countries to account “only fosters a climate of impunity where unilateral migration policies and practices can proliferate,” said Adriana Tidona, Amnesty International’s Migration Researcher.

But behind the rhetoric, all European states are also aware of the crucial role played by migrants in keeping sectors going including transport and healthcare, as well as the importance of attracting skilled labour.

“Behind the symbolic speeches, European leaders, particularly German ones, remain pragmatic: border controls are targeted,” said Sophie Meiners, a migration researcher with the German Council on Foreign Relations.

Even Meloni’s government has allowed the entry into Italy of 452,000 foreign workers for the period 2023-2025.

“In parallel to this kind of new restrictive measures, they know they need to address skilled labour needs,” she said.

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