Asylum Seekers Offer Spain Solutions to Its Aging Workforce Dilemma

 Spain looks to immigrants to drive economy

A group of Sub-Saharan African men are playing bingo in a conference room of a hotel near the northern Spanish city of León.

They laugh and celebrate when their numbers are called out, but many of these asylum seekers have harrowing stories.

Among them is Michael, who fled Ghana to escape a violent feud that saw his sister and father killed. After travelling by land to Morocco, he paid a trafficker who put him on an inflatable boat crammed with people which took him to the Canary Islands.

“I was so happy, because I knew all my troubles, and the people trying to kill me, were behind me,” he says. “Because once you are in Spain you are safe.”

In Ghana he worked as a petrol pump attendant and a storekeeper. He also started studying human resource management, which he hopes to be able to continue in Spain once he has settled.

“Spain is one of the most respected countries in the world,” he says. “Being here is an opportunity for me.”

Around 170 asylum seekers are staying in this hotel, in the town of Villaquilambre, which has been converted into a migrant centre.

They are among the many thousands of people who take the maritime route between the African coast and Spain each year.

So far this year, more than 42,000 undocumented migrants have arrived in Spain, an increase of 59% on 2023, the vast majority having undertaken the perilous crossing to the Canary Islands.

The archipelago’s difficulties in managing these large numbers have contributed to a fierce political debate about immigration, mirroring that in many other European countries. In Spain the controversy is driven in great part by the far-right Vox party, which frequently describes the trend as an “invasion”.

However, the arrivals have also underlined a major potential source of manpower for an economy which faces stiff demographic challenges.

Javier Díaz-Giménez, a professor of economics at the IESE business school and an expert in pensions, says that a baby boom which lasted from the mid-50 to the late-70s has created a generation of Spaniards who are heading for pension age, and the “baby crash” that followed means there are not enough workers to replace them.

“The next 20 years are going to be critical, because more and more people are going to retire,” he says. “According to the most recent demographic scenario, 14.1 million people will retire during that time.”

One way of tackling the workforce deficit, he says, is to ape the kind of economic model implemented by Japan, which has a similarly low birth rate, by investing heavily in algorithms and machines. The obvious alternative to that is immigration.

“If you want to grow GDP, if you want to pay pensions for all the retiring baby boomers, you need to grow GDP in a different way to how we’re growing it now, because there will not be as many people, unless we bring them in through immigration,” adds Prof Díaz-Giménez.

Spain’s central bank has put a figure on the projected labour shortfall. In a report published in April, it said that the country will need around 25 million immigrants over the next 30 years.

The left-wing Spanish government has also made the economic case for immigrants, with Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez describing them as representing “wealth, development and prosperity” for his country, while on a recent tour of Mauritania, Gambia and Senegal.

“The contribution of migrant workers to our economy is fundamental, as is the sustainability of our social security system and pensions,” he said.

Mr Sánchez’s coalition is hoping that a proposal to legalise the status of up to 500,000 undocumented migrants, mainly from Latin America, will get through parliament. Spain has seen nine such mass regularisations in its democratic era, most recently in 2005 under a previous government led by the Spanish Socialist Workers' Party.

However, the country’s economic needs contrast with ordinary Spaniards’ perception of immigration. A new poll shows that 41% of people are “very worried" by the phenomenon, making it their fifth-biggest concern after inflation, housing, inequality and unemployment.

While only 9% of Spaniards associate immigrants with economic progress, 30% link them to insecurity, and 57% believe that there are too many of them.

Villaquilambre, meanwhile, is an example of how undocumented new arrivals can integrate into the workforce.

The asylum seekers here are allowed to work six months after their arrival in Spain.

“Before they receive the authorisation to start working we place great emphasis on them learning Spanish, as well as offering them training courses and classes on risk avoidance,” says Dolores Queiro, of the San Juan de Dios Foundation, the non-governmental organisation that manages the migrant centre in Villaquilambre.

“When the date for them being able to start working approaches we get in touch with different companies – and they contact us as well – and we start looking for jobs for them."

Companies get in touch, she says, “because they know that we have people here who want to work.”

Makan, from Mali, has just started working for a local business, GraMaLeon, which makes walls, bathrooms and kitchen counters out of marble and granite. He commutes the short distance from the hotel to the factory each day on an electric scooter.

“I’m happy to be working,” he says, in halting Spanish, after completing a shift hauling slabs of marble around the factory.

Ramiro Rodríguez Alaez, co-owner of the business, which employs around 20 people, says that finding workers is not easy.

“We need a lot of manpower in this profession. But it’s tough, it gets cold, you have to lift heavy weight, so it’s not a job that many young people here want to do.

“There aren’t a lot of companies in this industry around here, but those that do exist all need people. We’re all looking for people locally and we can’t find them.”

He adds: “Immigrants provide an important source of manpower for us.”

Source: BBC News 

Comments

Sir Joseph said…
Hi Graham,

It seems that the Spanish don´t have problems with American immigrants. The dilemma between people in favour and in opposition begins when immigrants are from Africa. Will be it for the reason that the Spanish language?

I´m not expert in immigration but, in my opinion, any activity that affects people or that concerns rights of several people must be regulate. That is elemental because everyone will defend their rights. In the case of immigration are involved people from the original country and people from the country where immigrants arrive, moreover, both countries in the strict sense. As Spain is in the European Union, all countries members of the European Union are affected by immigration of Spain. I mean that Spain needs a law which regulates inputs and outputs of immigrants, not about rights and duties of immigrants. (I think must there are a lot of laws of right and duties). This law should agree among every country.

Anyway, in my opinion, this article is not objective because intervene immigrants, IESE (Universidad de Navarra), Spaniards associate immigrants, Vox party and, above all, the BBC News, which is the source. For this reason, I can´t make my judgement, because all opinions of this article are similar.

See you.
Graham said…
Morning José,

On the one hand, I sympathise with the plight of immigrants who are simply searching for a better life. On the other hand, a country must limit the number it allows to stay. I'm afraid the only way to deter people is to send anyone who illegally enters a country back to the country they came from immediately.

I have resorted to my friend Chat GPT for help though I have made a few changes to his correction.

It seems that the Spanish don’t have issues with immigrants from South or Central America. The dilemma between those in favour of and those opposed to immigration begins when immigrants come from Africa. Could this be due to the Spanish language?
Alternative interpretation: Could this be because African immigrants often don’t share linguistic or cultural ties with Spain? Or is it tied to socioeconomic or racial biases?

I’m not an expert in immigration, but in my opinion, any activity that affects people or concerns the rights of many must be regulated. This is fundamental because everyone will naturally defend their own rights. In the case of immigration, it involves people from the country of origin, people from the host country, and, more broadly, even the governments of both nations.

Since Spain is part of the European Union, immigration in Spain also impacts other EU member states. Therefore, Spain needs a law to regulate the inflow and outflow of immigrants, separate from laws governing the rights and duties of immigrants (I assume there are already many laws about their rights and duties). This law should be developed in agreement with all member countries of the EU.

However, in my opinion, this article is not objective. It includes perspectives from immigrants, IESE (a university in Navarra), Spanish associations related to immigrants, the Vox party, and above all, BBC News, which is the primary source. For this reason, I find it difficult to form a fair judgement because all the opinions presented in the article seem quite similar.