Germany Has Jobs but Not Enough People

31 Mar 2026

Germany Has Jobs but Not Enough People

By Your Favourite Journalist · March 2025

Imagine running a country where jobs are everywhere, but people are not. Welcome to Germany in 2025. The land of bratwurst, engineering excellence, and a labour market that’s basically a buffet with no guests.

So, what’s going on? Let’s break it down.

First, the numbers (don’t panic)

Germany’s Federal Employment Agency reported around 439,000 vacancies for skilled workers on average in 2024. That’s nearly half a million jobs just… sitting there. Lonely. Waiting. Like an unanswered text.

439K

Open positions

2.7M

Unemployed
(average 2024)

27%

Firms hit by shortage

The hardest-hit sectors? Nursing, healthcare, construction, and the skilled trades. In other words, the people who keep society literally functioning and nurses, builders, truck drivers are the ones Germany can’t find enough of. Not exactly a “nice to have” list, right?

So… why does this happen?

Germany didn’t wake up one morning and accidentally lose its workers. This has been a slow-motion disaster decades in the making, and it comes down to three big reasons:

As Germany Ages, Its Workforce Is Rapidly Shrinking

The working-age population is expected to shrink by about 9% over the next 10 years. The baby boomers are retiring, and there simply aren’t enough younger workers to replace them. It’s like a relay race where the second runner just… didn’t show up.

Future Workforce Is Simply Not Being Born

Germany is grappling with a low fertility rate, which compounds the problem of an aging population. Fewer babies today meaning fewer workers tomorrow. It’s really that simple, and really that terrifying.

Skills Mismatch: Jobs Available, Workers Not Aligned

2.7 million people unemployed. Hundreds of thousands of vacancies open. They just don’t match. It’s like having a key and a lock that somehow still won’t open.

What’s the impact?

At the start of Q2 2025, 27.2% of enterprises reported adverse effects due to staff shortages even after some improvement. The lack of qualified workers in construction and renewable energies risks becoming a major bottleneck for infrastructure investment. Germany wants to go green, build things, and stay competitive. Hard to do that when the construction crew has a permanent “Help Wanted” sign out front.

What’s Germany doing about it?

Germany isn’t just sitting around doing nothing. Recent immigration reforms effective 2024-2025 simplify hiring foreign talent, including an expanded EU Blue Card and a new “Opportunity Card” for job-seekers in bottleneck fields. Germany is also seeking to attract 400,000 foreign skilled workers annually over the next decade.

Will it work? Honestly, time will tell. But one thing is clear that Germany’s worker shortage isn’t a headline. It’s a structural problem that will shape Europe’s biggest economy for decades. The jobs are there. The question is: who’s going to show up?

Sources: Federal Employment Agency (BA), OECD, EU Commission, ifo Institute · March 2025

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