🇩🇪 Germany 2020: Population Ages 0-5. Divided up into population without a migrant background and with a migrant background (detailed). Source: Mikrozensus 2020 – Destatis

25 comments
  1. I made the effort to analyze the population of Germany in the under 6 years age group with regard to migrant background. I did this because I was curious about it and now I wanted to make it available to other people because I could not find a similiar visualization anywhere. It is for information purposes only. I do not guarantee the correctness and accuracy of the data or the presentation and strongly advise against further use. I’m open to criticism and suggestions for improvement. If anyone finds this interesting, I can make more diagrams or improve the current one. If there are any errors, I apologize in advance.
    Link to the source:
    https://www.statistischebibliothek.de/mir/servlets/MCRFileNodeServlet/DEHeft_derivate_00064412/2010220207004_Endergebnisse.pdf
    Bevölkerung und Erwerbstätigkeit Bevölkerung mit Migrationshintergrund – Ergebnisse des Mikrozensus 2020 – Statistisches Bundesamt (Destatis), 2021.)

  2. We are dealing here with babies, toddlers and small children who were born in Germany.

    I may wonder, what is the relevance of the national and racial origin of their parents ?

  3. It reminds me of one biased movie on youtube made by some left leaning channel around 2015/2016 (during migrant crisis) where they were saying something like ‘So what if Germany will accept 2, 3 or 4 million of refugees from muslim teritories? It’s a country of 80 million people so demografics will not change much. It’s only like 2% increase of muslim population’.

    Idiots didn’t consider the fact that Germany is an aging society where natives are old and die like flies, while migrants are young, fertile and tend to have very big families…

  4. The complete concept of “migration background” has become more and more nonsense since everyone with one parent or grandparent who migrated into Germany after 1945 counts. I think we should update this date a little and do something like 1990 or only count the first Generation. For example, the complete Gastarbeiter-generation is an integral part of modern German identity and clearly has become a unique German culture because they developed somewhat separated from their original countries. Counting these guys as strangers doesn’t make sense anymore.

  5. What is the date cut-off for background? Does it look 2 generations, 3, more? I am austalian, but am 25% German by ancestory. But those people were more than 5 generations ago. Would my kid be Australian? Or a mix of german, english and others?

  6. You know? I don’t feel that comfortable with Germany classifying its population by migrant background going three generations back. Way too reminiscent of their past

  7. I don’t like Germany at all but seing natives being replaced like that just isn’t right. I’m so tired of this shit, all I want is danish no BS policies for every European country. Modern politics keeping backwards populations on the lands that they ruined; keeping modern populations on their own lands to build the future.

  8. Germany is 78-80 % German and 90% European (white). Most immigrants are other Europeans. So according to this, children of Germans and other Europeans are counted as immigrants even though today the word immigrant in Europe is used for people of non-European origin. As time passes, children of one German and another European parent will assimilate and embrace their German ethnicity except if they want to embrace their dual European identities. Plus there are over 150 million people of German descent worldwide. They could return to their German homeland ( some have already because it has become a very popular option in the last few years).

  9. I wonder if turkey is counted as asia or europe in this. Turks are fior sure the biggest group here.

    Edit: okay, its Asia, you can see it when you Zoom in.

  10. what about russo germans, polish germans and italo-, arab-, and turko-germans in 3rd and 4th generation?

    are they counted as german or immigrant?

  11. About right in the large cities in Germany.

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    40% former inmigrants. Often the people who count themselves Germans are 5th generation inmigrants by family name.

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    Germany has always been a diverse spot in Europe. Now the job related migration is making Germany even more mixed than it ever was.

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