The Borneo Post

In pro-Brexit Kent, farmers are counting on EU workforce

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MAIDSTONE, United Kingdom: The accusation that immigratio­n drives down wages is one that irritates Gabriela Szomoru, a 31-year- old Romanian who has worked her way up to an office job at a farm in southeast England.

Szomoru came to Britain 10 years ago and started out picking strawberri­es before being promoted to her current job at a 600-hectare salad farm just outside Maidstone, the main town in the county of Kent.

“Driving wages down? No, we don’t offer less than the minimum wage. If the government decides this is the pay rate, we just follow,” Szomoru said.

“It’s a very hard job. You start at five o’clock in the morning, up to 10 hours every day, six days a week.”

Szomoru is married to a tractor driver from Hungary.

The two see their future in Britain and are planning to buy a house in the area, even as the government prepares to implement last year’s Brexit vote.

Resentment about the scale of immigratio­n helped determine the result in Kent, known as the “Garden of England”, where many of the seasonal workers in the sprawling orchards and fields come from eastern Europe.

Driving wages down? No, we don’t offer less than the minimum wage. If the government decides this is the pay rate, we just follow.

At the farm where Szomoru works, all 150 seasonal workers and 15 of the 30 permanent employees are non-British – for a total proportion of 92 per cent.

In Kent, about 59 per cent voted for Britain to leave the European Union – higher than the national figure of 52 per cent.

The anger of local residents, who have been particular­ly concerned about arrivals of undocument­ed immigrants who have crossed the Channel from France, is still palpable nine months after the referendum.

“I don’t like people jumping on lorries and coming over here working illegally. That needs to be sorted out. It drives wages down,” said Valerie Fuller, 80, a retired teacher.

In a country whose 4.7 per cent unemployme­nt rate is the envy of its European neighbours, the argument that immigratio­n weighs on wages was widely used by pro-Brexit campaigner­s.

The theory, however, often does not stand up to scrutiny.

“The short answer is no. It doesn’t have any effect on wages at all,” said Jonathan Wadsworth, a senior research fellow at the London School of Economics.

He said it could have a “very, very small” effect on low- skilled jobs, amounting to a decline of just less.

“The big falls in wages after 2008 are due to the global financial crisis and a weak economic recovery, not to immigratio­n,” Wadsworth said.

Local farmers in Kent say they rely heavily on foreign workers because they cannot find enough Britons willing to do the required jobs.

But Eddie Powell, a business owner in Kent and a local representa­tive for the antiestabl­ishment UK Independen­ce Party ( UKIP), said British people were “fed up being branded as lazy”.

“It’s unfair to those people who sometimes put in 60 or 70 job applicatio­ns and don’t even hear back from the employer,” he said.

“Some jobs are only advertised in the countries where the (migrant) workers are coming from,” he said.

James Bish, an 18-year- old Briton working at the Costa coffee chain, disagreed, saying that his compatriot­s were “too lazy”.

“Migrants are coming to do the jobs the British people don’t want to do,” he said.

“It is quite easy to get a job as long as you’re determined enough and you’re looking in the right places,” he said.

“The immigrants I do know are some of the hardest working people I know.”

Nick Ottewell, the director of the farm where Szomoru works, said he had received insults for making comments about the need for immigrants in the local press.

Ottewell said sectors like farming, healthcare and constructi­on “wouldn’t function” without them.

At his farm, seasonal workers get the minimum wage of £ 7.50 an hour ( RM41.20) and can live in caravans with showers and kitchenett­es that rent for £ 42 a week, including water and electricit­y.

Ottewell, whose farm produces 9,000 tonnes of salad a year, said he once took part in a government scheme to hire 10 people from the local unemployme­nt office.

“I ended up with one person turning up on the farm, and he ended up causing me problems,” he said. — AFP one percentage point or

Gabriela Szomoru, a 31-year-old Romanian

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 ??  ?? Farm manager Ottewell poses for a photograph in Wrotham, south east England.
Farm manager Ottewell poses for a photograph in Wrotham, south east England.

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