Record high: Foreign families make up 2/3rds of Germany’s citizen benefit recipients

In June, the proportion of families with children receiving citizen benefits in Germany and lacking German citizenship hit a historic peak. Among the 859,966 households in this category, foreign families accounted for a staggering 62.1%.

In contrast, only 37.9% of such households, or 524,393 families, were German—though many likely had a migration background.

For all recipients of citizen benefits, not just families, approximately one-third of Germans in this category have roots abroad but hold German passports. This data emerged from a Federal Employment Agency report published in November.

Interestingly, the trend reveals a stark reversal from 2010 when German families made up 71% of child-receiving benefit households, while foreign families represented just 29%. Today, foreign families also tend to have larger households, with 71.3% having three or more children, significantly outpacing German families in this regard.

In July, approximately 5.5 million people in Germany received citizen benefits. Of these, 48% were foreigners, while another 15.5% had a migration background. Only 36.5% were classified as bio-Germans.

The figures, drawn from a Federal Government response to a query by the AfD parliamentary group, underscore the evolving demographics of social welfare in Germany.

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