SHARE
COPY LINK

OPINION AND ANALYSIS

OPINION: Denmark must reform immigration if it wants to solve labour shortage

Denmark must make its immigration laws fairer if it wants to attract skilled foreign workers without subjecting them to years of bureaucratic uncertainty and stress, argues guest columnist Naqeeb Khan.

Fewer skilled foreign workers are likely to see Denmark as a favourable career destination if hostile immigration rules are not reviewed, argues The Local guest columnist Naqeeb Khan.
Fewer skilled foreign workers are likely to see Denmark as a favourable career destination if hostile immigration rules are not reviewed, argues The Local guest columnist Naqeeb Khan. File photo: Liselotte Sabroe/Ritzau Scanpix

Danish companies are feeling the effects of labour shortages more than ever.

An April 2021 report by Boston Consulting Group found that there will be nearly 100,000 employees shortage by 2030 for green jobs in Denmark, while Danfoss, a leading Danish manufacturer of green products says it is struggling to provide enough labour to produce the company’s green products.

“It has become clearly more difficult, and we are already fighting today to get the best candidates. We need to be very active and proactive to ensure the right competencies at all levels,” Danfoss CEO Kim Fausing said to newspaper Børsen.

Similarly, The Economic Council of the Labour Movement (Arbejderbevægelsens Erhvervsråd, AE) emphasized in a 2021 publication that Denmark will be 99,000 skilled workers short by 2030 and plans needs to be put in place now to counter these shortages.

Dansk Energi, an interest organisation for energy companies, has said Denmark probably needs more skilled workers if it is to reach the national target of reducing CO2 emissions by 70 percent by 2030.

Welfare is another sector where there is an acute demand for labour. Trade union FOA warned in its 2020 report that there will be a shortage of 40,000 social and health (SOSU) workers by 2029. The Danish Nurses’ union (Dansk Sygeplejeråd) anticipated in 2018 that there will be a shortage of 6,000 nurses by 2025.

Various organisations have suggested inviting foreign workers in response to this mounting labour shortage.

Today, foreign labour comprises a little over 10 percent of the total labour force in Denmark. According to the Danish Chamber of Commerce (Dansk Erhverv), the international workforce raised GDP by 200 billion kroner alone in 2020, corresponding to 8.5 per cent of the national GDP.

While generally opposed to easing rules on foreign workers, the government recently suggested it could be prepared to take steps to allow more foreign labour in response to the shortage.

Employment Minister Peter Hummelgaard voiced his concerns and said that new political efforts will be made to overcome the shortage while in her New Year speech, Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen said the government was “willing to discuss” the matter.

READ ALSO: More foreign nationals have full time jobs in Denmark than ever before

Denmark has introduced numerous schemes over the years for attracting foreign labour. These have included the pay limit scheme, green card scheme (abandoned in 2016), positive list and establishment card for international students.

Despite all these schemes, Denmark still cannot attract the international workforce it needs.

This is because Denmark has fallen significantly as a career destination for foreign employees. Denmark was in 13th place in 2014, while in 2020 it was 25th on a Boston Consulting Group (BCG) ranking for attracting foreign labour.

That makes Denmark less attractive than the neighbouring Germany, Sweden, and Norway who compete for the same foreign labour for their green transitions and economy, according to the BCG report.

There are quite a few reasons for why Denmark is continuously falling back as a career destination for foreign labour.

Strict visa requirements

Denmark has strict requirements for obtaining a work permit. The pay limit scheme, for example, makes several demands of both employers and foreign employees.

Foreign professionals must have a job offer with an annual income of 448,000, unrealistically high in many sectors. Similarly, the employer must fulfil several requirements before they can invite any foreign labour on the pay limit scheme, making it difficult for employers to hire internationals.

Unfair and retroactive immigration laws

It is a lifetime decision to migrate to a new country, especially when you have a family. One must plan for at least the next five years, while moving to a new country as a foreign employee.

This planning includes considerations of how one will be treated by the immigration laws now and in the future.

READ ALSO: How the dizzying cost of family reunification keeps Danes and foreign partners apart

Denmark has often been the focus of international reporting on its immigration laws, and not for good reasons.

But beyond headline-grabbing stories like ministers celebrating strict immigration laws with cake or the current government stripping Syrian refugees of their residency permits and aggressive curbs on citizenship, other, less spectacular rules are making the country a turn-off for skilled foreign labour.

It can take at least ten years of your life to settle in Denmark even when everything goes as planned, only to have it all thrown up in the air by the controversial decision to retroactively apply new laws.

Broadcaster DR last year reported the case of postgraduate student Katja Taastrøm, who expected to become a Danish citizen but because of new citizenship rules applied retroactively, must now wait for at least 6 more years.

Copenhagen School of Design and Technology graduate Katie Larsen left Denmark due to strict immigration rules after living for five years in the country.

There are thousands of such stories of miseries and frustrations.

With the new discussions about inviting foreign labour, many believe it will be the start of a new era of miseries and frustrations should the current political climate of curbs on immigration and citizenship continue to be espoused by both the governing Social Democrats and the far right.

What can be done to attract foreign workers?

According to a 2017 Danish Ministry of Higher Education and Science assessment, 80 percent of foreign graduates from Danish universities leave Denmark within two years of their graduation. That number is likely to have since increased.

To bring Denmark back on top of the foreign workforce career destination list and prevent further miseries and violations of immigrants’ rights, I argue the following measures must be taken into consideration while inviting foreign workers.

  • The requirements for obtaining a work permit should be easier with fewer bureaucratic procedures.
  • The annual income requirement for obtaining visa and later extension should be realistic. For example, for the pay limit scheme, the income requirement should be reduced to a more realistic amount.
  • A special positive list for doctors, nurses and green jobs should be introduced with a quick response rate.

READ ALSO: Why does Denmark take so long to authorise foreign medical professionals?

Even if the above was to be granted, foreign professionals might not, at first, choose to come to Denmark, or they might leave after a few years if fairer immigration rules are not introduced. These could be:

  • Foreign professionals with a job offer should be given a permanent residency permit at their arrival in Denmark, similar to rules in Canada and some other countries.
  • If foreign professionals are given a limited-period visa then the rules for their visa extension, permanent residency permit and citizenship should be mentioned on their first visa offer letter and those mentioned rules should prevail until the applicant has been granted Danish citizenship.
  • Retroactive implementation of rules must not take place at all. 

Without fairer rules, a drive to bring more skilled foreign labour to Denmark is only likely to result in disappointment all round.

Naqeeb Khan is a research graduate of the University of Glasgow, Scotland and resides in Denmark. He is president of Green Human Resources and an executive member with the Danish Green Card Association (DGCA). He can be contacted via email.

Member comments

Log in here to leave a comment.
Become a Member to leave a comment.
For members

OPINION AND ANALYSIS

OPINION: Please stop turning Scandi words like ‘friluftsliv’ into viral trends

Originally a Norwegian invention, 'friluftsliv' is popular across Scandinavia and is one of many exported words which portrays the locals as special mythical beings when, in reality, they are much more like the rest of us than the online trends suggest.

OPINION: Please stop turning Scandi words like 'friluftsliv' into viral trends

Norway is known for its abundant nature, and Norwegians are known for their love of the outdoors. Typically, the word best used to describe this marriage of nature to outdoor enthusiasts is friluftsliv, a term also used in the other Scandinavian countries.

Getting outdoors, being close to nature and feeling a surge of calmness and contentment wash over you as you take in your surroundings is the general gist of how you are meant to feel if you are doing it ‘properly’.

Or that is how you are supposed to feel, according to the endless stream of articles, lifestyle blogs and marketing materials online.  

Many push the idea that friluftsliv is some state of mind or way of life inherent to Scandinavians. 

Don’t believe it! Despite what the various, omnipresent lifestyle trend articles tell you, the locals are just like anyone else. 

They do love to be outdoors, yes. But they much prefer to be outdoors when the weather is good, and the conditions are preferable.

For all of Norway’s many inventions, such as the paperclip and, uhm, the cheese slicer, they cannot take credit for coming up with being outside when the weather is good.  

Like the rest of us, when the conditions are rubbish, most would instead take a raincheck. 

And for pretty much all Scandinavians, friluftsliv isn’t a state of mind, concept, way of life or the key to happiness and health that babies in these countries are born clutching onto. 

Instead, the locals have more of a no-nonsense interpretation of the word. Everyone has heard it, everyone knows what it is, and to them, it just means getting outside and enjoying yourself. 

A perfect case in point would be kindergartens and schools in Scandinavia. When it’s time to go outside, kids are just sent out to brave the elements, whether that’s in a sunhat and SPF50 or in a thick waterproof snowsuit. There are no ceremonies, rituals, or lessons stressing the importance of friluftsliv.  

The more outdoor-orientated kindergartens, such as Norway’s naturbarnehage and friluftsbarnehage, do place more of an emphasis on the importance of being outside.

Even then, they stress the importance of enjoying the outdoors responsibly rather than engaging in any holistic brochure talk (unless you live in the west of Oslo or Bærum and Asker).    

This isn’t to criticise Norwegians. Far from it, it is a relief that they do not possess some special ingrained quality that allows them to march up mountains for miles or glide across the snow when temperatures dip below -10C and the rest of us would rather be at home.

The Norwegians, and by extension Swedes and Danes, who embrace friluftsliv have every right to be proud: of the region’s beautiful landscapes, for getting out and seizing the day, or just for enjoying a close relationship with nature. 

Furthermore, the authorities should be congratulated for facilitating an active outdoor lifestyle through well-maintained hiking trails and public access rights which allow you to forage, camp, hike and swim wherever you choose.

READ MORE: Friluftsliv, or the reason I moved to Sweden

The real frustration lies with the jumbled, exaggerated vomit of words, concepts and catchphrases which come together to form a kind of bingo card of Scandinavian lifestyle trends.

You’ll have seen the buzzwords everywhere, magazines, articles, blogs and posts pointing to Scandi words as the reason why locals are happier, healthier and generally better than everyone else in every conceivable way (people from Norway, Sweden and Denmark do little to play down this notion, and who can blame them?). 

Norwegians, Swedes, and Danes apparently spend their lives sitting in silence, savouring the contentment of lighting a candle and sharing a lovingly made hot chocolate with a friend (hygge), taking a break from the hustle and bustle of work to have a coffee and chat with a colleague (fika), or creating cosy memories with the family while playing board games around the fire (kos). 

None of those are to be confused with the more recently trendy version of sitting around, this time perhaps in a more relaxed and informal setting – such as eating a takeaway before binging some Netflix (mys). 

Given how many of these other “lifestyles”, “states of mind,” and “concepts” seem to involve a lot of time sitting around, it’s a surprise that anyone has any time to be outside. 

READ ALSO: Five suggestions for the next hyped Swedish lifestyle trend

Enjoying the great outdoors is certainly one of the best things about living in one of the Nordic countries, and what makes it better still is how happy many locals are to share friluftsliv with you and encourage you to find your own version. 

However, the constant mystification of a few mundane concepts which boil down to ‘having a sit down for a bit’ or ‘going for a walk’, is simply too much. 

Sure, these words might help marketers flog a few more candles or publishers to shift a few more glossy magazines. 

But, for the most part, the best thing about these concepts is that they are really just unique words for quite normal, boring things: things that normalise the locals in Norway, Sweden and Denmark rather than exalt them and portray them as having an almost alien view of life and how it should be lived. 

SHOW COMMENTS