Germany’s new immigration law could lure Polish-based Ukrainians: report
PR dla Zagranicy
Alicja Baczyńska
30.10.2018 08:30
Germany’s new immigration law could prompt 500,000 Polish-based Ukrainians to leave the country, according to a report.
Photo: jarmoluk/pixabay.com/CC0 Creative Commons
The German government, seeking to ease immigration rules to offset labour shortages, plans to bring the new regulations into force in early 2019, the Rzeczpospolita daily reported.
Krzysztof Inglot, chairman of employment agency Personnel Service, told the daily that 500,000 Ukrainians could leave for Germany.
A workers’ exodus would hit the industry and agriculture sectors, Inglot said.
According to the Work Service employment agency, around 60 percent of Polish-based Ukrainians could leave for the West.
Inglot said: “This poses a great risk to the Polish economy. Within two or three months the [country’s] labour shortage could expand from 165,000 to 500,000 vacancies.”
“It would also trigger an enormous rise in wage pressures and lead to a drop in the competitiveness of [Polish] companies,” Inglot said. He added that as a result, the manufacture of consumer products could fall by 10 percent.
Rzeczpospolita estimated that well over a million Ukrainian workers are based in Poland. Around 426,000 are legally employed in the country, according to the paper, citing the Social Insurance Institution (ZUS).
(aba/pk)
Source: Rzeczpospolita
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