Germany Projects Up to 288 Thousand Jobs Per Year For Foreigners Until 2040 To Avoid Collapse In The Labor Market In Health, Technology, And Construction.
Germany has officially entered demographic alert. With a rapidly aging population and thousands of professionals retiring each year, the country projects a significant reduction in its workforce over the coming decades unless it expands skilled immigration. Recent studies indicate that the German market could lose up to 10% of its workforce by 2040, putting pressure on strategic sectors such as health, technology, construction, and logistics.
According to projections based on analyses from the Institute for Employment Research (IAB) and the Bertelsmann Foundation, Germany may need around 288 thousand foreign workers per year to keep its economy operating at a sustainable pace. In a more pessimistic scenario, this number could rise to 368 thousand annual immigrants.
Workforce Could Fall From 46 Million To 41 Million By 2040
Currently, Germany has about 46.4 million economically active people. The estimate is that this number will drop to approximately 41.9 million by 2040. In longer projections, by 2060, the workforce could shrink to 35.1 million.
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The main factor behind this retraction is the mass retirement of the generation known as “baby boomers.” With fewer young people entering the labor market and historically low birth rates, the country faces a structural imbalance between active workers and retirees.
Migration experts warn that, without consistent policies for attracting and retaining foreigners, the impact could directly affect Germany’s competitiveness in the global arena.
Health, Technology, Construction, And Logistics Lead Demand For Professionals
The sectors most affected by the labor shortage are already facing concrete hiring difficulties.
In the healthcare sector, there is a shortage of nurses, caregivers, and hospital professionals. In the technology sector, companies are looking for developers, software engineers, and data specialists. The construction industry faces a deficit of skilled workers, while logistics is struggling with a lack of drivers and specialized operators.
The need for professionals is not just cyclical — it has become structural.
New Immigration Law And Opportunity Card Facilitate Entry Of Foreigners
To tackle the problem, the German government approved, in 2023, one of the broadest migration reforms in its recent history. The legislation relaxed requirements for the recognition of foreign diplomas and accelerated the issuance of work visas.
One of the main innovations was the creation of the Chancenkarte, known as the “Opportunity Card.” The program allows professionals from outside the European Union to enter the country to seek employment even without a prior contract, provided they meet criteria such as qualifications, professional experience, and basic language knowledge.
The government estimates granting hundreds of thousands of visas in the coming years to fill the growing gap in the labor market.
Additionally, candidates can search for opportunities through the European platform EURES, which connects employers and workers across various countries in the bloc.
Germany Needs More Than Visas: Cultural Challenge And Talent Retention
Despite the legal changes, experts point out that merely facilitating visas will not be enough.
The Bertelsmann Foundation emphasizes that foreign workers will only stay in the country if they find a welcoming environment, legal stability, and long-term prospects. Companies and local authorities will need to invest in integration, professional recognition, and cultural adaptation.
Without this, there is a risk of high turnover and difficulty in retention.
Labor Shortage Is A European Problem, But Germany Leads Alert
The phenomenon is not exclusive to Germany. Several countries in the European Union face the same demographic challenge, with populations rapidly aging and fewer young people entering the labor market.
It is estimated that about two-thirds of small and medium-sized enterprises in Europe report difficulties in filling qualified positions. Nevertheless, Germany, as the largest economy on the continent, feels the impact more intensely due to the size of its industry and dependence on skilled labor.
What To Expect Until 2040
If the projections hold true, Germany will increasingly rely on skilled immigration to maintain economic growth, sustain its pension system, and preserve its position as an industrial power in Europe.
The global competition for talent is expected to intensify. Countries like Canada, Australia, and the United States are already competing for highly skilled professionals, and Germany will need to remain attractive in terms of salaries, quality of life, and stability.
The opening of up to 288 thousand annual vacancies for foreigners is not just a migration policy — it is an economic survival strategy.


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