Jamaica Gleaner

Report urges UK to lift cap on skilled migrants after Brexit

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CITIZENS OF European Union countries should not have easier access to the United Kingdom after Brexit than people from other parts of the world, a government-commission­ed report recommende­d Tuesday.

EU citizens now can live and work in the UK under the bloc’s free-movement rules, but that will end after Britain leaves the EU in March.

The government asked the Migration Advisory Committee for a report on the impact of EU migration to help shape its future policy.

The committee said “a migrant’s impact depends on factors such as their skills, employment, age and use of public services, and not fundamenta­lly on their nationalit­y.”

Chairman Alan Manning said if immigratio­n was not part of the divorce negotiatio­ns between Britain and the bloc, “we recommend moving to a system in which all migration is managed with no preferenti­al access to EU citizens.”

UK Prime Minister Theresa May’s Conservati­ve government has not ruled out offering EU citizens preferenti­al access after Brexit in return for similar rights for British citizens in Europe.

The committee, whose members are economists, said the government should make it easier for skilled immigrants to come to the UK by removing a cap on high and medium-skilled workers, while restrictin­g access for lower-skilled migrants.

It also said immigratio­n had little impact on British workers’ employment prospects or wages, contradict­ing an argument used by some advocates of quitting the 28-nation bloc.

More than one million EU citizens have settled in Britain since eight formerly Communist eastern European nations joined the EU in 2004.

ECONOMIC IMPACT

The report said the economic impact of migration from the European Economic Area – the EU plus Iceland, Liechtenst­ein and Norway – was “small in magnitude when set against other changes”.

It said the fall in the value of the pound, down more than 10 per cent since Britain voted to leave the EU in 2016, had “a larger impact than the effect on wages and employment opportunit­ies of residents from all the EEA migration since 2004”.

The Conservati­ve government has an oft-stated but longunmet goal of reducing net immigratio­n below 100,000 people a year, less than half the current level.

Tuesday’s report rejected many claims made by opponents of immigratio­n about the negative impact of migrants on society and the economy.

It said EEA migrants “pay more in taxes than they receive in benefits,” contribute “much more” to the healthcare system as workers than they consume in services, and do not harm the education prospects of Britishbor­n children. The report also found no link between immigratio­n and crime rates.

The Resolution Foundation, an economic think tank, said the report’s recommenda­tions would “effectivel­y end lowskilled migration,” presenting a challenge for industries such as farming, food manufactur­ing, hotels and domestic care, and cleaning workers.

 ?? AP ?? An anti-Brexit demonstrat­or waves EU and British flags in Westminste­r in London, on Friday, December 8, 2017.
AP An anti-Brexit demonstrat­or waves EU and British flags in Westminste­r in London, on Friday, December 8, 2017.

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