Spanien gewährte 500.000 Migranten ohne Papiere legale RP in einem mutigen Schritt zur Bekämpfung des Arbeitskräftemangels und des Sozialdefizits. Vor nicht allzu langer Zeit hatte Spanien die höchste Arbeitslosenquote, bevor Finnland die Macht übernahm. Sollte Finnland zumindest die gleichen oder andere Lösungen anstreben?

https://edition.cnn.com/2026/01/27/europe/spain-legal-status-undocumented-migrants-latam-intl?Date=20260127&Profile=CNN,CNN+International&utm_content=1769555967&utm_medium=social&utm_source=facebook&fbclid=IwZXh0bgNhZW0CMTAAYnJpZBEwN2VLQklhS0RKbWZ3NGNpUXNydGMGYXBwX2lkEDIyMjAzOTE3ODgyMDA4OTIAAR5YEABAF9wBxolLc96yR6GZZdI8JzIDN3kmqD6filVATqdFaqJ1VjqXwJRMFQ_aem_sBcMf65XIL0GCH62OchXxQ

Von Spiritual-Result3164

9 Kommentare

  1. Spiritual-Result3164 on

    „Foreigners who arrived in the country before Dec. 31, 2025 and can prove they have been living in the country for at least five months will be granted legal residency of up to one year and work permits valid for any sector and throughout the country. They will need to prove they have no criminal record.“

    Basically a 1 year working visa. If they find a job? Nice. If they don’t find a job? A good reason for legal deportation.

  2. LaplandAxeman on

    Not much point in that for Finland. Finns don´t want to hire foreigners.

  3. HarryCumpole on

    The first step in the right direction would be to get rid of this racist corporate bootlicker scum government. Baby steps.

  4. PotemkinSuplex on

    So, just to be clear, the solution to unemployment should be to virtually import a bunch of labor that would be close to equal to unskilled since a lot of immigrants don’t know the language?

    Immigrants without a permit shouldn’t be counted in unemployment stats, I’m pretty sure people who are allowed to work, are registered as seekers and are not in full-time education.

  5. There is no lack of workers and the more people who are on social benefits find work the lower the deficit would be. So no that’d be a terrible idea. With that being said I’m sure that will be the governments plan next week to change the subject on there 10 billion euro nothing burger they’ve been serving up their entire term.

  6. Maybe Finland also should first get billions from RRF/EU? Like the 163 billion Spain gets, 80 billion in grants.

    [https://commission.europa.eu/business-economy-euro/economic-recovery/recovery-and-resilience-facility/country-pages/spains-recovery-and-resilience-plan_en](https://commission.europa.eu/business-economy-euro/economic-recovery/recovery-and-resilience-facility/country-pages/spains-recovery-and-resilience-plan_en)

    As long as Finland is paying EU, instead of getting billions, world looks a bit different..

    After we get our 80 billion, we can give „1 year work visas“ too, like Spain actually did.

  7. Yes, the solution to unemployment indeed is to have even more cheap and low-skilled labour in a country competing for the same jobs. Your teachers can be proud, they have taught you well.

  8. onlywatchinghere on

    It’s not really comparable. The problems are different, but I’ll say the following. The immigrants coming from latin America do not have a language issue and have just because of this a lower barrier to engage in the employment market of Spain. Spain also has problem with north African immigrants who come to the country illegaly and are in a dire situations as it is said that they are better off in a prison in Europe than ”free” in their country of origin. If they have no legal means to work – they are more likely to divert into illegal work or even crime. Therefore the spanish government seeking a practical solution to this with work permits makes sense (I do not know the details of this plan, I must say). Finland on the other hand is desperate for more immigrants however the current government is shooting itself in the foot by building barriers to enter and barriers to make Finland an appealing country specially for skilled workforce. It does not help that the Persu party makes sure that the focus of the public discourse stays on the refugee policy… so, yes, Finland should seek other solutions and as it is a complex issue, there are no simple solutions to the fix this I’m afraid.

  9. It’s a little cheaper for Spain when their unemployment benefit is a sack of potatoes a month.

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