90,000 work visas: Why Germany is turning to India's youth
India has no shortage of degree holders, but the number of quality jobs remains limited.
India has no shortage of degree holders, but the number of quality jobs remains limited. Thousands of kilometres away, in Europe’s largest economy, the problem is the reverse: there are too many vacancies and too few people to fill them. That is why Germany is increasingly turning to India, home to one of the world’s youngest populations.

Germany is facing one of the sharpest labour shortages in its recent history. The country needs not only engineers, doctors and nurses, but also bakers, butchers, carpenters, mechanics, stone masons and technicians.
These are jobs that once formed the backbone of its vocational economy, but are now struggling to attract local workers.
The shift is now visible in policy. Germany has significantly expanded its annual quota for skilled work visas for Indians, raising it from 20,000 to 90,000. For many young Indians, this is opening a path that would have seemed unlikely just a few years ago.
Why Germany Needs Workers Now
The reason lies in demography. Germany’s population is ageing rapidly, and in the next two years, more than half of its workforce in several government departments is expected to retire. A large section of its post-war “baby boomer” generation is also leaving the workforce.
This has created labour shortages across industries, from healthcare and construction to manufacturing and food services.
According to estimates cited in international reports, Germany needs around 288,000 foreign workers every year to keep its economy functioning.
This labour need has also shaped policy ties. In recent years, India and Germany have moved closer on migration and skilled mobility, making it easier for Indian workers and trainees to move there for vocational education and employment.
Not Just Degrees ,
But Skills
What makes this moment significant is that Germany is not looking only for highly specialised professionals. It is also seeking workers trained in practical trades, the kind of skills often undervalued in India’s degree-heavy education culture.
That includes:BakersButchersRoad construction mechanicsStone masonsCarpentersHealthcare and nursing workersIndustrial techniciansFor years, India’s social and educational system has pushed students towards formal degrees, even when those degrees do not lead to secure employment.
Germany’s labour shortage is exposing a different possibility: that skill-based work can, in some cases, offer better earnings and more stability than a conventional degree.
The Story Of
A Shift
One example often cited is that of Ishu Gariya, a 20-year-old from Delhi, whose journey reflects this transition.
Instead of spending heavily on a college degree with uncertain returns, she chose vocational training and moved to Germany.
Today, she works as a baker in the Black Forest region, a physically demanding job that begins before sunrise, but one she says gives her financial stability and independence.
Her decision reflects a growing reality for many Indian students and job-seekers: the route to a stable life may not always pass through a conventional college campus.
How This Movement Began
The groundwork for this shift was laid in 2021, when a simple email from India reached a German contact in Freiburg. The question was straightforward: could Germany absorb enthusiastic Indian youth willing to undergo vocational training?At the time, Germany was struggling to find workers for traditional trades such as butchery and baking. The idea was tested.
In 2022, the first batch of 13 young Indians arrived in Germany through the recruitment and training platform Magic Billion. Since then, that number has grown into the hundreds.
What began as a small experiment is now part of a larger labour pipeline.
The Numbers Show The Change
The rise in Indian workers in Germany is already visible.2015: 23,320 Indians employed in Germany2024: 136,670 Indian workers 1. A large number of Indian workers in Germany are employed in high-demand technical sectors.
- These include STEM fields — Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics — and MINT professions, the German equivalent covering Mathematics, Informatics, Natural Sciences and Technology.
- According to data from the Institute of the German Economy (IW), based on Federal Employment Agency statistics for 2024, more than 152,000 Indian nationals were in social insurance-covered employment in Germany by early 2025.4. Of these, over 32,800 Indians were working in academic MINT professions.
- The data also shows that around one-third of full-time Indian workers aged 25 to 44 are employed in highly skilled technical roles.
That jump is not just statistical. It reflects a wider shift in how migration, employment and vocational training are being imagined between the two countries.
For India, this moment carries both opportunity and warning.
Germany’s labour crisis may be opening a door for Indian youth. But it is also holding up a mirror. And what it reflects is uncomfortable: in many cases, a skill may now travel farther than a degree.- EndsPublished By: Rishab ChauhanPublished On: Mar 25, 2026 17:01 IST
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