NewsBalancing safety and stigma: Insights on Germany's crime rates

Balancing safety and stigma: Insights on Germany's crime rates

New statistics show that immigrants in Germany commit crimes more often than the rest of the country's residents. However, experts warn against drawing overly simplistic conclusions from this.

Crime among immigrants. Facts, fakes, and prejudices
Crime among immigrants. Facts, fakes, and prejudices
Images source: © EPA, PAP | Patrick Pleul
Violetta Baran

Has Germany become safer? A cursory glance at the current police crime statistics might suggest that it has. The number of registered crimes decreased by 1.7 percent in 2024, with the police recording 5.84 million cases.

However, upon closer analysis of the numbers, doubts arise about whether the situation has improved.

Fewer offenses thanks to marijuana legalization

The answer is no. The main reason for the decline is the legalization of cannabis possession and cultivation for private use. Interior Minister Nancy Faeser and the head of the Criminal Police Office (BKA), Holger Münch, emphasized this while presenting the latest crime data.

Both were particularly concerned about the 1.5-percent increase in violent crimes, now over 217,000 cases. Among them were nearly 18,000 knife attacks. When these occur in public places and the perpetrator does not have a German passport, it invariably sparks a political debate in Germany. The question often arises whether increased migration leads to more crime.

Münch: "It's not about origin"

The statistics show that there are significantly more foreign suspects than German ones regarding their share of the total population. This applies to both violent crimes, such as murder or rape, and street crimes, which include various offenses from pickpocketing to drug trafficking. In this context, BKA chief Holger Münch emphasizes that it is not about origin but the concentration of risk factors.

This includes the living conditions of refugees, which are often very difficult. They have to live in mass accommodation centres and cannot work. Münch lists key reasons for higher crime rates among foreigners: psychological stress. Immigrants experience violence more often, especially in childhood. They also have a more positive attitude towards violence, he says.

Faeser: "We must discuss this without fueling animosity"

Interior Minister Nancy Faeser recognizes how emotional and populist the debate about immigrant crime often is. "We must discuss this openly. But, I emphasize again, without stirring up animosity," she said. In this context, she also mentions the problematic situation of many refugees, whose human traffickers painted a false picture of Germany.

Faeser encouraged the media to report more often that refugees often have to spend several years in tents with strangers. The interior minister hopes this will reduce the motivation of some people to enter Germany.

Misleading term: "Foreign crime"

From a scientific standpoint, it has long been known that the term "foreign crime" is potentially misleading and can reinforce prejudices. Susann Prätor from the Lower Saxony Police Academy has researched migration and crime for years. A few days before the police crime statistics were published, she presented her conclusions at a press conference organized by the Mediendienst Integration centre.

Her words about the high percentage of foreigners among suspects agreed with those of the interior minister and the head of the criminal police. "Ultimately, it's not about nationality or origin, but about the conditions in which people live in Germany," she emphasized.

Causes: Poverty, poor education, violence

Susann Prätor is a sociologist, psychologist, and lawyer by training. Her perspective is thus broad, and she lists the causes of crime irrespective of passport and origin: poverty, poor education, worse financial situation, living in uncertain conditions, violence from parents. However, the researcher also says, "A particular image of masculinity is more pronounced in some groups with non-German origin."

The expert also points to another possible explanation for the statistically significantly higher number of foreign suspects: the behaviour of victims and witnesses. "It has been empirically proven in studies that people perceived as foreigners are reported more often than those perceived as Germans," she says. Prätor suspects that appearance or language influences this.

Don't lump all foreigners together

The researcher also finds it problematic that a heterogeneous group is treated as one regarding so-called foreign crime. An immigrant from the USA, a traumatized war refugee from Syria, a Turk who came to Germany decades ago, a tourist, and a foreigner who came here to commit a crime and then left Germany are all compared to people with German passports.

To slightly correct this distorted image, numerical data in the annually published police crime statistics are now presented in a more differentiated way. This includes indicating that the proportion of men and younger people is higher among the non-German population—this alone should result in a higher crime rate. This happens because men and young people in general, regardless of their origin, are more often criminals.

The police also point out that there are crimes that inherently can only be committed by foreigners: primarily offenses against asylum and residence law.

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