
Participants carry flags, a banner that reads, "We are the people!" and printed articles about crimes related to migrants, during a far-right "Pro Chemnitz" group demonstration in Chemnitz, Germany
Herbert Bruecker, who heads the migration research department at the Federal Institute for Employment Research (IAB), told German daily Die Welt that about 35 percent of the population will have a migrant background or be a migrant themselves by the year 2040. The figure includes anyone who was not born in Germany or who has at least one parent who is not a German citizen.
The researcher said that in big cities such as Frankfurt, people with migrant backgrounds will make up 65-70 percent of the population. Bruecker argued that Germany's economic viability will depend on drawing in migrants, but cautioned that they should be highly-skilled workers.














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