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German crafts boom reaches limits

Klaus Ullrich
December 22, 2017

The German Confederation of Skilled Crafts has warned that a worsening shortage of labor is threatening to curb growth for businesses. DW looks at the booming sector, which is seen as key to Europe's largest economy.

Handwerksberufe-Zimmermann, Zimmerer
Image: picture-alliance/Sven Simon/F. Hoermann

The skilled craftworker's services are called on millions of times daily in Germany. In a long and successful tradition the German skilled crafts sector has developed a strong position in the country's economic and social life. 

Around a million companies are listed in the official register of handicrafts and the registry of companies involved in the skilled craft sector. This includes 5.45 million people and 360,000 apprentices who are completing their training.

This means 12.5 percent of all employed Germans and over a quarter of all apprentices in Germany work in manual labor related companies. In 2016, the total revenue of those businesses reached €561 billion.

Skilled crafts occupations

The skilled crafts sector in Germany includes over 130 occupations in virtually all sectors of the economy. Small wonder that it's responsible for the most places of vocational training.

Read more: Germany exports a secret of its success: vocational education

Its dual training system is unique in the world as it aims to combine practical work and learning in the enterprise with theoretical education in a vocational school during training.

After three, or sometimes three-and-a-half, years of training, apprentices need to pass the skilled worker's examination.

Everyone who's obtained the certificate however can acquire further qualifications or even sit the master craftsman's examination. This is the top specialist crafts qualification and authorizes the person to manage an enterprise and to train apprentices.

Read more: Germany: Foreigners face barriers to vocational training

In a number of German federal states, the master craftsman's qualification opens the door to studies in a polytechnic or university.

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Craftsmen look beyond borders

An increasing number of skilled crafts enterprises export their products or provide services abroad. Over 50,000 enterprises from among the German skilled crafts sector sell their products and services abroad, with the European Union being their main market. Germany's Chamber of Commerce and other trade groups thereby provide valuable expertise for business expansion beyond Germany's borders.

Moreover, the German Confederation of Skilled Crafts is involved in many international partnerships and development projects. The focus of these efforts is on helping businesses to explore and build markets in the emerging economies of the developing world.

With around 550 professional qualification institutions, the German Confederation of Skilled Crafts has a resource pool that stretches from qualification opportunities, to the organization of workshops or professional tests.

As a result, Germany's manual labor sector has been able to double its exports in the last 15 years. About 60 percent of those are generated by products in the fields of mechanical engineering, electrical engineering as well as medical devices.

Read more: Germany faces huge shortage of skilled workers

At home in Germany, the sectors booming activity however also has its downsides. The recent upsurge in construction, thanks to ultra-low interest rates, has brought most crafts businesses to the limits of their capacities. This means that Germans often have to wait for an average three months to get an appointment with a skilled laborer.

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