The program for the employment of Ukrainian refugees in Germany completely failed, - BILD.


The German government introduced a special program to facilitate the employment of Ukrainian refugees, but the results turned out to be unsatisfactory. According to BILD, employment proved to be very ineffective.
In 2023, only 20% of integration course graduates received offers from employment centers, but none of them found a job. In the current year, 40% of graduates received vacancies, but in fact, only less than 1% of them started working.
German bureaucracy "spoiled" Ukrainian refugees by creating a system that does not motivate them to work. The bureaucratic system taught refugees that they could live well with little work.
Currently, about 720,000 Ukrainians receive social assistance in Germany, of which about 500,000 are of working age. The monthly expenses on aid amount to about 539 million euros.
The main reasons for the low employment rate are the long wait for integration courses and the ease with which employment centers accept refusals of vacancies. At the same Time, Ukrainian refugees often refuse courses without providing medical certificates about their health.
Currently, 3.48 million refugees live in Germany, of which 1.18 million are Ukrainians. Earlier, Finance Minister Christian Lindner proposed changing the approach to providing aid and introducing a new legal status for Ukrainian refugees.
A fundamental shift in thinking is necessary to no longer allow us to be taken advantage of.
Recall that in Germany they plan to tighten the rules for refugees: what awaits Ukrainians.
Read also
- Iran is urgently exporting oil: Bloomberg learned what is happening
- The exchange rate will surprise: how much Ukrainians will have to pay for 100 dollars by the end of the year
- Pensions do not cover even utilities and transportation: how much do Ukrainians really receive
- NBC learned who Trump consults regarding Iran
- The situation is complex: the minister of energy addressed Ukrainians with an important statement
- 'Not planning to lose': Putin's aides speak of advantage in the war against Ukraine