Is there such a thing as the Merkel effect?
The chancellor's invitation to Spanish engineers may not have lured that many abroad
Last year, German Chancellor Angela Merkel announced that her country would
need around 100,000 engineers in the coming decade, and suggested that many of
them could come from Spain. At a time of worsening unemployment her comments
prompted many young people to seriously consider moving east. The main problem
in most cases was simple: few of them speak a word of German. In fact, according
to a recent survey by the European Union's statistics office, just two percent
of Spaniards are able to communicate in German, as opposed to the EU average of
11 percent.
Merkel's comments set in motion a kind of gold rush to learn German, which
has seen long lines outside colleges belonging to the Official School of
Languages, and the elite Goethe Institute, run under the auspices of the German
embassy. The phenomenon shows no sign of abating so far, but teachers and others
working in the language studies sector doubt that we are entering a golden age
of German in Spain, and that the current boom will fizzle out.
No figures are as yet available on the number of people who have signed up
for German courses in the last two years, although partial data points to a
significant increase. The Goethe Institute says that it has seen a 30-percent
increase in applications, while the Spanish Federation of Language Teaching
Centers (FECEI) says that its members have reported a 100-percent increase in
numbers each year. "Around 90 percent of our students are learning English, and
the other 10 percent are learning other languages, with about two percent of the
total attending German classes," says FECEI president Richard Johnson.
María Jesús Gil, the head of the German Department at the Complutense
University's language faculty in Madrid, says that the number of students
studying German has increased over the last two years and that the popularity of
the language is fast approaching that of English.
"It is clear that although the statistics do not yet reflect it, interest in
German rose sharply following the German chancellor's comments. But we can't
expect the Merkel effect to last forever. We have to work to make sure that this
isn't something that lasts just a few years, and take advantage of this in the
long term," says Michael Höfig, the head of teaching at the Goethe Institute in
Madrid. He adds that at the current rate, the number of German speakers in Spain
could soon reach four percent of the population, the same as in France,
according to EU figures. "That would be a very acceptable level, bearing in mind
the low starting point," he concludes.
A full picture of the scale of the phenomenon has yet to emerge, but there is
already a profile of the typical Spaniard who wants to learn German: a student,
or recent university graduate, who is seriously thinking about emigrating to
Germany in the near future if he or she doesn't find work in Spain. "It is a
very different profile to the previous type of person interested in learning
German, whose reasons were largely cultural, rather than professional," says
Matilde Cerrolaza, who runs the Tandem school in Madrid, a pioneer in the
teaching of German in Spain, which has seen a 60-percent increase this year in
applications to study the language.
It's the same story at the Goethe Institute, which has decided to adapt many
of its classes to the needs of its students. "People are not looking for a
general understanding of the language," says Manfred Ewel, the body's academic
director. "What we are being asked for are classes related to job-hunting,
interviews, or the world of work in general. We have had to adapt some of our
methods and create special courses, with the emphasis on interview techniques.
This is what our new students want to learn."
It's clear that the majority of new students are interested in learning
German to find a job. But is "instant" German possible? Can students learn the
basics - enough to find a job - in a few months? What level of German do
employers expect applicants to have? Is it possible to find work without
understanding the language at all? "It depends on the company. Some
multinationals only hire people who speak English, but in general, most German
companies, or hospitals looking for medical staff, for example, require
applicants to have at least mid-level knowledge," says Walter von Plettenberg,
the managing director of the German Chamber of Commerce in Spain. He recommends
that anybody intending to head for Germany in search of work should have at the
very least a basic knowledge of the language. "Otherwise, they will likely find
that in interviews, they are simply unable to explain what their particular
skills are."
Ewel advises anybody thinking of learning German to take a long-term
approach: "There is no point in doing so simply on the basis that you are
unemployed and need to find a job in Germany." He says that other factors need
to be taken into account, such as what type of work one is looking for, the time
available to learn the language, and the ability that one has for learning.
Otherwise what starts out as a dream can all too often end in a nightmare. The
academic director of the Goethe Institute illustrates what can go wrong: he
organized a special intensive course for 15 medical professionals who had been
shortlisted by a German private hospital, which was paying for the course. Three
of the group were unable to pass the first exam, simply because they had greater
difficulties in acquiring language than the others. "They then found themselves
without a job, when they had already assumed that the language aspect was little
more than a formality," says Ewel. "Around 20 percent of each group is
rejected," he adds.
The head of FECEI adds that Spaniards find German much harder to learn than
English. "Not so much because it is more difficult, but because it is much less
familiar. English is around us everywhere we go: on television, in advertising,
movies, music, the internet... but pretty much the only way you are going to
hear or see German is if you go out of your way to do so," he says.
This, say the experts, means that it takes at least two years of studies to
acquire a reasonable understanding of German - although intensive courses can
achieve that level in a year. A basic level, sufficient for some jobs, can be
reached in six months of intensive learning, and with application.
In response to the perceived demand for German, many language schools and
private teachers are now offering courses. The experts say that would-be
students should not be fooled by courses that promise to teach the language in
three months. The regional government of Madrid is offering 100 hours of free
teaching to 20,000 people on its unemployment register, but Ewel says this would
barely scratch the surface: "This kind of course is fine for people thinking of
going on vacation to Germany, but they are certainly not enough to acquire the
skills necessary to live and work in the country."
Even if they are able to overcome the challenges of learning German and reach
a reasonable level of communication skills, Spaniards face another problem: the
German way of life, which until now has not proved much of a draw. The Goethe
Institute hopes that another of the outcomes of the so-called Merkel effect,
aside from learning German, will be a change in attitudes toward Germany among
Spaniards. "Let's be honest: a German is much more likely to be attracted to
living in Spain than the other way round. Germans love to come to Spain, and
many want to retire here, to live here as well, and not just on the coast. In
contrast, Spaniards find the idea of moving to Germany very challenging," says
Manfred Ewel.
The facts speak for themselves: there are one million Germans living in
Spain, and more German schools here than anywhere else outside the country; in
Germany there are just 130,000 Spaniards, of whom only 46,000 are working.
What's more, since Merkel suggested Spaniards think about working in Germany,
just 5,000 have taken her up on the offer, according to the German Federal
Employment Office.
"There is no doubt that many Spaniards are thinking about going to live and
work in Germany at the moment, but we cannot say that this intention has
actually translated itself into a mass exodus, contrary to the stories that we
hear in the media," says Walter von Plettenberg. "On the other hand, even if one
isn't thinking about emigrating, knowledge of German is very useful in Spain,"
says the managing director of the German Chamber of Commerce. "There are more
than 1,000 German companies operating in Spain, with around 300,000 employees.
These are international groups, and although most of them use English more than
German, being able to speak the language is certainly one way of standing out
from other interviewee candidates when looking for work with German companies,"
he suggests.
Very interesting article. And so familiar. I was at the University back in the nineties when I decided to study German because I wanted to apply for a job at the big chemical companies, most of them German-speaking. And I also remember taking lessons at Tandem, because at the time I was working and living in Madrid. Funny how everything comes back!
ResponderEliminar