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Politics

German opposition slams 36,000 vacant care jobs

April 25, 2018

New government figures show that tens of thousands of professional care jobs in Germany are unfilled. One opposition politician has called the government's existing plan to tackle the shortfall "a joke."

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Stock photo - Nurse cares for elderly man in a wheelchair
Image: Colourbox

Opposition politicians have said the government's plan to improve Germany's professional care industry is insufficient after it was revealed that some 36,000 jobs are unfilled.

In a reply to a Green Party request for information, the government said that there were around 23,000 vacancies in elderly care and some 12,000 vacancies in sick care in 2017.

Read more: Germany to recruit more elderly care workers abroad

The government's figures published on Wednesday also showed that the number of professional carers without a job was far lower than the total number of vacant positions.

Immigrant Careers

Read more: German organization prepares refugees to care for the elderly

Government plans 'a bad joke'

Merkel's conservatives (CDU/CSU) and the center-left Social Democratic Party (SPD) had pledged in their coalition government agreement to improve working conditions in the care industry and finance 8,000 more care jobs.

The SPD's spokeswoman for care policy, Heike Baehrens, said the government's plan was "a realistic first step" to tackle the shortages and would be followed by other initiatives.

Read more: Berlin police cracks down on house care scam

But the Green Party's care policy spokeswoman, Kordula Schulz-Asche, told the Berliner Zeitung newspaper the government's plan was "a bad joke" in light of the new vacancy statistics.

Lack of Caregivers - who will look after the elderly?

The Greens' parliamentary chief Katrin Göring-Eckhardt said the care industry was on the brink of a "serious crisis" and called on the government to introduce a "emergency program" to finance 50,000 new jobs.

Read more: Germany adopts nursing care reforms for elderly

Who's to blame?

The Left Party also criticized the government's plan, with care policy spokeswoman Pia Zimmermann blaming the previous CDU/CSU/SPD government for bad working conditions in the industry that had made professional care work "unattractive."

The chair of the German Foundation for the Protection of Patients said hospitals and elderly care homes were primarily responsible for the problem: "It is not acceptable that hospitals and care homes have made savings at the expense of professional carers while at the same time increasing their profits," said Eugen Brysch.

Read more: Should we use robots to care for the elderly?

Disputed numbers

The director of the German Institute of Applied Nursing Research questioned the government's vacancy figures: "According to our data there are 38,000 unfilled positions in elderly care homes and ambulance and outpatient services alone," Frank Weidner told the epd news agency, adding: "We should assume there are around 50,000 vacancies."

Left Party chief Bernd Riexinger also called the government's figures unrealistic. He said 100,000 new healthcare positions and 40,000 elderly care jobs would need to be financed to "end the sometimes life-threatening conditions in the care industry."

amp/jm (AFP, dpa, epd, KNA)

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