The labor ministry has revised the list, placing Mohammed on top instead of Michael
Mohammed and Ahmad are among the most common names of welfare recipients in Germany, according to newly revised figures released by the federal government. Olena, a Ukrainian variant of Helen, is the only female name in the top ten.
Germany’s unemployment rate reached 6.4% in August, with the total number of jobless people exceeding three million for the first time in a decade. According to Federal Employment Agency data, 5.42 million people were receiving welfare benefits at the end of 2024 – of which 48% were foreigners, compared to 19.6% in 2010.
The right-wing Alternative for Germany (AfD) party had requested information on the most common first names of recipients to support its argument about the failure of integration.
In June, the labor ministry replied that the leading names were Michael, Andreas and Thomas, followed by Daniel, Olena and Alexander – prompting media ridicule of the AfD. However, the initial list did not combine different spellings of names, such as Thomas and Tomas or Mohammed and Mohamed, listing them separately.
The revised data placed Mohammed – spread across 19 spellings – in first place with nearly 40,000 entries, followed by Michael with about 24,600 and Ahmad with more than 20,600. Olena remained the only female name among the top ten, with around 14,200 entries.
Germany is the European Union’s top migrant destination and the world’s third-largest refugee-hosting country, according to UN data. Under former Chancellor Angela Merkel’s open-border policies, more than a million people arrived from Syria, Afghanistan and Iraq during the 2015 migrant influx. In recent years, the country has granted temporary protection to 1.2 million Ukrainians and received 334,000 asylum applications in 2023, nearly a third of the EU total.
The migrant crisis has strained housing, public services and finances, contributing to the rise of the AfD, which has recently led national polls as Germany’s most popular political party.
The AfD came in second in February’s federal election with 152 seats in the 630-seat Bundestag, but was excluded from coalition talks. Germany’s domestic intelligence agency (BfV) has designated the AfD a “confirmed extremist entity.” While that classification was temporarily suspended, senior officials have continued to seek legal grounds to pursue a formal ban of the party.
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