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Proposals for a Reformed European Asylum and Migration Policy

Clara Albrecht, Yvonne Giesing, Panu Poutvaara and Elitsa Stefanova

No 59, EconPol Policy Brief from ifo Institute - Leibniz Institute for Economic Research at the University of Munich

Abstract: The weaknesses of the Common European Asylum System have led to conflicts of interest between the EU’s external border states and the main destination countries, such as Germany. After years of negotiations, the reform of the European asylum policy was formally adopted by the European Parliament in April 2024. It introduces an accelerated procedure in order to speed up the asylum application process, especially in terms of rejecting applications deemed to be unjustified. However, it does not address one of the main problems: the lack of legal ways for low-skilled people who are migrating for economic reasons. Key Messages The implementation of a common European asylum policy is difficult due to conflicts of interest between the EU's external border states and the main destination countries, such as Germany. The tenor of the reform adopted by the European Parliament in April 2024 was to speed up the asylum application process, especially in terms of rejecting applications deemed to be unjustified. One reason for the overload is the lack of legal ways to come to the EU from Africa and Asia, especially for low-skilled people. The EU could learn from Germany’s Western Balkans Regulation and create legal pathways for migration from African and Asian countries.

Date: 2024
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