Home » Netherlands » Is Amsterdam Finally Growing Sick of Expats?

Is Amsterdam Finally Growing Sick of Expats?

Amsterdam may have made it into the top five cities for expats in last year’s Expat Insider survey, but the welcome they can expect may be waning.With English fast becoming a native language, rocketing house prices, and Dutch traditions such as Sinterklaas struggling for survival, some Dutch residents are feeling pushed out – and one group is taking the blame: the expats.

Anti-Expat Sentiments

“What will be the next craze to take root in the Netherlands? Will we soon be celebrating Thanksgiving or something? Will Sint Maarten be abolished in favour of Halloween?” tweeted a Dutch native as the annual tussle between local customs and those imported by the expat community made itself felt last November in Amsterdam.

An ad campaign encouraging Londoners to move to Amsterdam, which was tweeted by Hackney Cyclist, received many negative comments from Amsterdam’s local population. One Twitter user described the advert as “a campaign by the city of Amsterdam, who wants to replace regular citizens with expats because expats pay three times as much rent as regular people.”

“Amsterdam must stop courting expats,” agrees another commenter who is frustrated by the hypocrisy of the recent 30-day limit on AirBnB in a city that actively lures expats with generous tax breaks.

Climate Of Tension


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This anti-expat feeling is unsurprising. A record 38,000 migrants came to Amsterdam last year, the majority of whom were expats or students from the UK, India, or the USA. The city’s population of 845,000 is expected to nudge one million by 2050, creating considerable tension in an already stretched housing market.

According to a 2017 study by Savills, Amsterdam’s housing prices are the steepest climbers in Europe, with an increase of over 20 percent in just one year. The cost of housing in the city is having a dramatic effect on its demographic, with research undertaken by the CBS between 2012 and 2016 revealing that 40 percent of young couples moved their family out of Amsterdam within four years of the birth of their first child.

Speaking to AT5’s Park Politiek in November, Amsterdam housing ombudsman Laurens Ivens pointed to expats as contributing to the housing shortage in Amsterdam and forcing local families out. Those who have lived in the city for more than three years should be given priority, he argues. ‘Amsterdam belongs to Amsterdammers.’

Earlier this year, the Young Socialists of Amsterdam protested against a rental market that seemed to favour expat tenants over long-term residents with nowhere to live.

A Complex Situation

“Expats, are – among other factors – largely responsible for driving up house prices,” agrees Dutch national Randall McDonald, a sound designer from Amsterdam.

“When the time came for me to buy a house here in Amsterdam, I became painfully aware that people with higher incomes were able to bid more aggressively. Throw in the 30 percent tax ruling and it tends to be game over for locals.”

But the situation is far from cut and dried. McDonald owes his job to a British company that moved to Amsterdam in 2008, so he can also see the benefits of an international culture.

“For me, it’s exciting to see a lot of diversity in restaurants, better shops, and cool new initiatives, all clearly influenced from outside our borders. We’re [now] on a par with any other major city in Europe and this can definitely be credited – in part – to the expat community, filling in the blanks.”

Many expats, too, can see both sides. “I remember when the housing market in London exploded,” says British chef and Amsterdam resident Damian Taylor, “We didn’t blame the foreigners, we just accepted that it was part of having a global city. The problem is that Amsterdam is a village.”

Victims Not Perpetrators

Dafna Eccles, a consultant at !WOON tenant advisory centre, gets plenty of expats through her doors. Far from being the perpetrators of the housing problem, she says they are often the victims. “There’s an awful lot of space for exploitation, and expat tenants are at the forefront of that. Expat tenants are the most vulnerable.”

With a saturated housing market and competitive pricing, Amsterdam is feeling the strain.

She is quick to rebut the stereotype of the wealthy expat: “Not everyone is rich and has their rent paid. There’s plenty of people answering the phone at Booking.com and living in a room in Zuid-Oost. These are not rich people.”

Simon Woolcot is the founder of the Amsterdam Shallow Man group, where expats adapting to Dutch life vent their frustrations. He is annoyed that migrants are being scapegoated.

“Expats are pressuring Dutch property owners to increase the rents in Amsterdam … making property unaffordable for locals? This statement is about as logical as not blaming the property speculators (mainly Dutch), who are actually responsible for the exorbitant rental prices in Amsterdam.”

Dutch national Koen Gyzel, founder of Dutch language school Koentact, concurs.

“In our community building in the Jordaan … they do not like expats that much because they believe expats are the ones that are getting all the houses in the area and making the house prices go up, but it is the stupid Dutch locals who own those nice canal houses and rent it out to expats so they can double the price and then throw the expats out again after a year.”

Some of the property shortage should also be attributed to a small group of predominantly Dutch investors who block-buy properties. According to research undertaken by Het Parool newspaper in 2017, there are at least 20 private owners who each own more than 100 properties in Amsterdam, with one owner, Johannes Cornelis Martinus Veldhuijzen, having more than 500 properties to his name.

Expat Label Defunct

Some argue that the expat label and its association with an affluent corporate migrant is becoming outdated and irrelevant. New arrivals represent a broader cross-section of society and are far less pampered than their predecessors. Cushy relocation packages are fast becoming a thing of the past. Today, just 37 percent of expats get their school fees paid and only 23 percent get help with accommodation costs.

Expats aren’t really expats any more, says Frank Uffen, Partnership director at the Student Hotel, which works closely with business and universities to accommodate international clients. “They’re just people who don’t have a Dutch passport … A lot of them are not, you know, ‘oh, I work for Shell, I have a senior position, we have three kids…’ No, no, no. These are people who have a passport that gives them the right to work here, they come on local contracts.”

Expats are also staying longer, integrating and learning Dutch. In their 2017 study, the International Community Advisory Panel found that more than half of the expats they polled planned to stay for at least five years.

Invited But Not Always Welcome

The city has, for many years, striven to be a hub for sectors such as technology, finance, fashion and advertising, and the recruitment of foreign talent is seen as being crucial to this goal. The highly skilled worker permit; the EU blue card; and the 30 percent tax ruling, which allows specialist workers to claim 30 percent of their salary tax-free for a period of eight years, have all made it easier for international professionals to work and thrive here.

The number of courses taught in English is causing concern among some locals.

The government appears to have invited this expat group and the expats have responded enthusiastically. Between 2009 and 2015, there was a seven percent increase in the take up of the 30 percent ruling, with a reported 56,000 people taking advantage of the tax break in 2015.

However, planned policy changes to reduce the ruling from eight to five years may reflect a wider discomfort with expat perks and a recognition of the cost to the state, currently estimated at over €900m a year.

Also controversial is the number of university courses now taught in English – more than 20 percent of undergraduate courses, and 60 percent at postgrad level. The number of international students in the Netherlands has doubled in 10 years. This open invitation to draw talent from a wider international pool is not appreciated by all. Headlines like the Telegraaf’s ‘Stop Engelse Gekte!’ (Stop this English madness!) (28/2/18) reveal a division in society.

Immigration Can Boost the Economy

Nevertheless, as expat numbers in the city have grown, the economy has boomed. An international outlook has, in many ways, brought more opportunities for residents here. Last year, the Dutch economy grew by 3.1%: a ten-year record. Contrary to the idea of a finite number of jobs in the city now threatened by an expat invasion, employment figures grew by three percent in 2016 (OIS) and around 12,000 new businesses were founded.

Amsterdam is a city in flux, torn between a need to provide affordable housing for its long-standing residents and a desire to be a global centre of excellence for education, industry and commerce. Expats are caught in the middle and, like other migrants around the world, make easy scapegoats. Amsterdam is both sick of expats and enriched by them. It’s an uneasy paradox in a fast-growing city that continues to enthral skilled migrants.

Are you an expat in Amsterdam? Share your thoughts in the comments below!


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