Current:Home > StocksEU turns to the rest of the world in hopes that hard-to-fill-jobs will finally find a match -Pinnacle Profit Strategies
EU turns to the rest of the world in hopes that hard-to-fill-jobs will finally find a match
View
Date:2025-04-12 16:27:10
BRUSSELS (AP) — Contrary to the vision of a “Fortress Europe” to keep illegal migrants out, the European Union on Wednesday proposed to lower the drawbridge for targeted labor migration where the 27 nations can no longer find a local talent pool to fill essential jobs.
With the proposal, the EU is seeking to walk a tightrope between populists and extremists, who condemn almost any kind of migration into the bloc, and businesses, from local to multinationals, who increasingly cannot find locals to fill jobs in the EU’s quickly aging job market.
From construction to health care and the high-tech experts needed for the EU green transition, the local talent pool in the bloc of 450 million people has increasingly proved insufficient.
And instead of forcing talent from across the globe to seek entry into the lucrative EU labor market via the illegal and dangerous migration route where the EU is increasingly restrictive, Wednesday’s plans call for a safe and legal way.
“This package is also a strong, if not strongest, disincentive to irregular migration,” said EU Commission Vice-President Margaritis Schinas.
Member nations already have a EU-wide platform where job seekers can more easily find vacancies in any of the 27 countries, but with the new plan, the system would go worldwide. The EU-wide platform now has almost 3 million vacancies, a vivid illustration of how third-country nationals could profit.
On top of the platforms, the plan calls for measures to cut red tape when it comes to professional qualifications so that job seekers should not be held back for months and years because of diverging paperwork.
The plans will now be assessed by the 27 member states and the EU’s parliament before they can be turned into reality.
In the meantime, the issue gets mixed up in the overall European debate on migration, where labor concerns often get short shrift in a shrill debate that often spills over into raw racism. The theme will also be key in next Wednesday’s parliamentary elections in the Netherlands.
Economically too, the urgency is there, and EU businesses realize they are facing competitors across the globe.
“Europe is engaged in a global race for talent, the same way that we are fighting a global race for raw materials or energy,” Schinas said, mentioning the United States, Canada, New Zealand and Australia as prime rivals.
Such is the need that even the EU’s economic juggernaut, Germany, is looking for some extraordinary measures. Two weeks ago, the government approved legislation that would allow asylum-seekers to start working earlier even if their situation has not fully been settled.
The German package still requires parliamentary approval and is the latest in a series of steps taken recently by the government as it tries to defuse migration as a major political problem. The issue was one of several that led to a poor showing in state elections last month for Chancellor OIaf Scholz’s quarrelsome three-party coalition and gains for a far-right party.
Schinas had no doubt the battle with the far-right would continue.
“We will continue to oppose this populist discourse that Europe is either incapable of doing anything on migration, or opening the floodgates we are not doing either. We are working for a regulatory solution long term,” he said.
veryGood! (6937)
Related
- Questlove charts 50 years of SNL musical hits (and misses)
- Israel battles Hamas near another Gaza hospital sheltering thousands
- Cyprus’ president says his country is ready to ship aid to Gaza once a go-ahead is given
- How Mark Wahlberg’s Kids Are Following in His Footsteps
- Average rate on 30
- Princess Kate to host 3rd annual holiday caroling special with guests Adam Lambert, Beverley Knight
- Ukrainians who fled their country for Israel find themselves yet again living with war
- Shipwreck called the worst maritime disaster in Seattle history located over a century later, explorers say
- Whoopi Goldberg is delightfully vile as Miss Hannigan in ‘Annie’ stage return
- NFL Week 11 winners, losers: Broncos race back to relevance with league-best win streak
Ranking
- Who are the most valuable sports franchises? Forbes releases new list of top 50 teams
- The Excerpt podcast: Rosalynn Carter dies at 96, sticking points in hostage negotiations
- Global talks to cut plastic waste stall as industry and environmental groups clash
- Boat crammed with Rohingya refugees, including women and children, sent back to sea in Indonesia
- Civic engagement nonprofits say democracy needs support in between big elections. Do funders agree?
- New Mexico Supreme Court weighs GOP challenge to congressional map, swing district boundaries
- Travis Kelce Reveals How His Love Story With Genius Taylor Swift Really Began
- Michigan school shooting survivor heals with surgery, a trusted horse and a chance to tell her story
Recommendation
Mets have visions of grandeur, and a dynasty, with Juan Soto as major catalyst
Princess Kate to host 3rd annual holiday caroling special with guests Adam Lambert, Beverley Knight
Utah special election for Congress sees Republican former House staffer face Democratic legislator
Judge bars media cameras in University of Idaho slayings case, but the court will livestream
US appeals court rejects Nasdaq’s diversity rules for company boards
The messy human drama behind OpenAI
Israel battles Hamas near another Gaza hospital sheltering thousands
Second suspect arrested in Morgan State University shooting