February 12, 2025
A German diaspora in North Carolina is booming thanks to a multibillion-dollar investment from Germany, but a potential Trump Presidency is causing anxiety #NewsGerman

A German diaspora in North Carolina is booming thanks to a multibillion-dollar investment from Germany, but a potential Trump Presidency is causing anxiety #NewsGerman

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Across the Atlantic, residents in a little-known State are toasting Steins in German beer halls, enjoying bratwurst and schnitzel in Bavarian restaurants, and working for giants like Siemens. They have a surprising share of German immigrants to thank.

North Carolina, an east coast state with a relatively attractive six-hour time difference from mainland Western Europe, has long been an attractive destination for businesses from Europe and other regions. But there has been renewed attention from Germany in recent years.

German firms significantly nearly tripled their investments in the U.S. last year. The $15.7 billion splurge resulted from Germany’s flatlining domestic economy, incentives flowing from Joe Biden’s Inflation Reduction Act, and a pivot away from Germany’s long-standing trade dependence on China amid geopolitical tensions and an economic slowdown there.

Much of that has flowed to North Carolina, where German giants like Siemens, Daimler Trucks, and Schott North America have each invested hundreds of millions of dollars in recent years. Some 109 German companies have invested more than $2 billion in North Carolina over the last decade.

Even the NFL franchise Carolina Panthers, based in Charlotte, will get in on the partnership when it plays the New York Giants in Munich in November, transforming long-standing business links into cultural ties.

North Carolina’s 2.5% corporation tax is set to be phased out entirely by 2030, attracting foreign businesses to the State.

But Anders Victor, director of business development at the Economic Development Partnership of North Carolina (EDPNC), points out the relationship goes back to the 1700s when German settlers migrated south from Philadelphia and settled in the state.

“It’s a multi-century relationship that we have with German expats, and it manifests now as a very organized and passionate community,” Victor said.

North Carolina’s 2.5% corporation tax is set to be phased out entirely by 2030, attracting foreign businesses to the State.

But within that thriving direct investment is an engine of German expats and their offspring bringing a quirk to the State’s workforce. More than 15,400 Germans have immigrated to the State since 2017.

Siemens helped inspire a surging apprenticeship program in North Carolina, which has grown in popularity across the U.S. as the value proposition for a college degree declines. Colleges and universities in the State also provide German companies with a skilled local workforce in life sciences.

The outward perception shows a win-win for German immigration to North Carolina.

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