UK needs ‘intelligent immigration policy’
The UK should have an intelligent immigration policy allowing only skilled workers to cross its borders, Robert Oulds from the Bruges Group think tank told RT. The expert says that London should have its own rules and not be dictated to by Brussels.
RT: The report found that most of those who come to
Britain from Europe, are looking for jobs, not handouts. Why all
the fuss, then? Isn't that what the British economy needs -
people willing to work hard for a little less?
Robert Oulds: People should get a reasonable wage but the
situation where people are coming in predominantly from Eastern
Europe such as Poland; we’re going to have fallout from Bulgaria
and Romania from January 1, when they can seek employment here.
These are undermining the native British people. They are working
for less, so the wages are being depressed and British people are
finding that they are left on the scrap heap so to speak. They
can’t find work. They are not willing to look perhaps as hard as
some people from Eastern Europe, so then they are trapped in
welfare dependency.
Of course not everybody that is coming here is coming here for
work. Some are coming here to use the NHS which is free at the
point of delivery and some are claiming benefits. Ian Duncan
Smith, the secretary of state for pensions and social security,
believes it can be as much as 2 billion pounds that is being
spent on welfare support on migrants.
There is also pressure on schools and housing. In London, the
cost of rent has just gone up enormously because there is so much
demand and a lot of that is from people who are moving into
London from all over Europe and they are adding a lot of
pressure. So, even though visitors are coming here to work, it is
creating a system which is undermining British people in the
workplace.
RT:Britain and the EU are at odds over discrimination
against migrants - specifically London banning migrants from
certain handouts. Why shouldn't they qualify for all benefits?
RO: British tax payer’s money should primarily be spent on
British citizens and we have problem in the UK. We have a problem
with the social services being overloaded. We have a problem of
excessive demand for the housing. We have a problem with British
people on unemployment benefits that can’t find work. We have a
problem of people coming here to claim benefits that does exist
to a degree.
The rules should change. Yes the EU law does state that there
should be no discrimination regardless of what country a citizen
or someone comes from, but of course they should not be the case.
British borders should be managed according to the needs of this
country, rather than being dictated to by Brussels.
RT:For now, the UK is part of the EU. Isn't it only
fair that the UK respects the same rules that the other 27 states
follow?
RO: Perhaps we should leave the EU. We would be better
off, the situation is not so much about closing doors. It’s about
inviting those that would benefit the British economy the most.
We can have a system of work permits. We can still be open to
people from other countries if they have a particular skill that
this country needs and perhaps something where they can invest in
the UK and they can be a real benefit.
But to have no safeguards to perhaps 29 million people from
Romania and Bulgaria as well as other people from Poland and the
other Eastern European states that joined the EU in 2004 is of
course an unintelligent policy. We need an intelligent
immigration policy that suits British needs and where we can
supply services for those who are actually contributing in the
UK, rather than this open door approach that we have at the
moment.
The statements, views and opinions expressed in this column are solely those of the author and do not necessarily represent those of RT.