German states to spend 17 billion euros on refugees in 2016
Germany's federal states are planning to spend around 17 billion euros (US$18.7 billion) on dealing with the refugee crisis in 2016, the newspaper Die Welt said on December 29, citing a survey it conducted among their finance ministries.
The sum, bigger than the 15.3 billion euros that the central government planned to allocate to its education and research ministry in 2015, is a measure of the strain that the influx is causing across the country as a whole.
The Association of German Cities called for a large-scale home building program for refugees many of whom have been sleeping in school gymnasiums, office blocks and tents.
Germany is the favored destination for many of the hundreds of thousands of refugees fleeing conflict and poverty in the Middle East and Africa, partly due to the generous benefits that it offers.
The German states have repeatedly complained that they are struggling to cope, and Chancellor Angela Merkel's open-door policy has caused tensions within her conservative camp.
Die Welt said that excluding the small city state of Bremen, which did not provide any details, current plans suggested the states' combined expenditure would be 16.5 billion euros.
The paper said actual costs would probably be even higher because the regional finance ministries had based their budgets on an estimate from the federal government that 800,000 refugees would come to Germany in 2015. In fact, 965,000 asylum seekers had already arrived by the end of November.