This fast-greying nation of 81 million is facing a demographic time bomb. With a morbidly low birthrate and a flat-lining population, hundreds of schools have already closed. Some neighbourhoods, particularly in the increasingly vacant east, have become ghost towns. For Germans, it has raised a serious question: Who will build the Mercedes and Volkswagens of tomorrow?
Enter a record wave of migrants.
In a now-viral video, Merkel last week addressed a woman who expressed fear that refugees would bring more Islamist terror. Merkel took a deep breath before replying: "Fear is a bad adviser."
Merkel isn't the only one being pragmatic, with industrial leaders here heralding the flood of working-age migrants. Some German universities are opening their doors to allow refugees into classes for free. The Government is offering "welcome classes" teaching German to migrant children and adults. Germany is rolling out the welcome mat as its unemployment rate has fallen to 6.2 per cent - one of the lowest in Europe. Trade and service companies - from caterers to plumbing firms - are struggling to find new workers, with more than 37,000 trainee positions unfilled, according to the Federal Employment Agency. Couple that with the fact many of the asylum seekers - especially Syrians - are highly educated or skilled workers and include doctors, engineers and architects and suddenly, for Germany, what initially seems like a crisis becomes something else.
At least that's the view of Oliver Junk, the mayor of Goslar, a town of 50,000 in north-central Germany. Suffering from a net population loss of 4000 since 2002, in recent years, he said, Goslar has had to shut three schools and is now dotted with the "occasional empty house".
- Washington Post-Bloomberg
EU green-card plan
• European Commission President Jean-Claude Junker said a US-style green card system in Europe would kill off illegal smuggling.
• At present non-EU migrants wishing to work in Europe must apply for a work permit with the government of the nation they wish to work in. Juncker's plan would see that system centralised.
• He sees the move as a way of bringing younger workers to the continent to solve the problem of an ageing population.
• EU countries would be forced to accept 160,000 refugees from Italy, Hungary and Greece. Countries would be fined 0.002 per cent of GDP if they refuse. The relocation scheme comes with a carrot of € 6000 ($10,660) for each migrant taken.
• Germany and France are in favour, but Hungary, Poland and Slovakia are bitterly opposed.

