The Herald

Scots anger as date revealed over ending cheap labour from Europe

- By Michael Settle

LOW-SKILLED workers will be banned from entering Britain from next January 1, the UK Government has announced, as it seeks to shift the country towards a “high wage, high skill, high productivi­ty economy”.

Employers were told they “will need to adjust” to the new set-up that seeks to end their reliance on “cheap Labour from Europe”. But they will have just 10 months to do so and ensure their staff have a right to work in the UK.

The new “single global system” will treat European Union and non-eu citizens equally and will give “top priority” to those with the highest skills and the greatest talents, including scientists, engineers and academics.

A key pillar of Boris Johnson’s new points-based immigratio­n policy will be that it will apply across the whole of the UK, with no special measures for Scotland or any other part of the country.

The Home Office made clear: “We will not introduce different arrangemen­ts for different parts of the UK.”

But that brought an angry response from Scots politician­s.

The plan ends the EU policy of free movement of people and there will be no route for low-skilled workers into the country.

A policy paper, released by the Home Office, pointed out there were around 170,000 non-eu citizens in lower-skilled occupation­s and “this supply will continue to be available”, it explained.

The paper also pointed to a pilot scheme for seasonal workers in the agricultur­al sector that will be quadrupled to 10,000 places in time for this year’s harvest.

So far, more than 3.2 million

applicatio­ns to stay in the UK have been made by EU citizens under the current Settlement Scheme, which will be open until June 2021.

The policy paper makes clear EU citizens will not require a visa to enter the UK when visiting for up to six months and the Common Travel Area with Ireland will continue as normal.

As expected, the salary threshold for skilled migrants will be lowered from £30,000 to £25,600 for those coming to the UK with a job offer.

Described in the policy paper as a “simple, effective and flexible”, the Government plan means people who want to live and work in the UK will need to gain 70 points to be eligible to apply for a work visa.

Points will be awarded for key requiremen­ts like being able to speak English to a certain level, having a job offer from an approved employer and meeting a minimum salary threshold.

Other points will be awarded for certain qualificat­ions and if there is a shortage in a particular occupation.

Announcing the policy during a visit to Imperial College in west London, Home Secretary Priti Patel said: “It is right that people should speak English before they come to our country, that they should have a sponsored route, whether it’s through employment or a sponsored route through an academic institutio­n.”

Ms Patel described publicatio­n of the Government’s immigratio­n policy paper as a “historic moment for the whole country”.

She said: “We’re ending free movement, taking back control of our borders and delivering on the people’s priorities by introducin­g a new UK points-based immigratio­n system, which will bring overall migration numbers down.”

Scotland Office Minister Douglas Ross added: “The new system will work for Scotland and the whole of the UK. It will support our renowned universiti­es and world beating high-tech sector.

“It avoids putting up barriers to business by splitting our Uk-wide system and it ensures our whole economy can continue to grow.”

However, opposition parties were highly critical.

Diane Abbott, for Labour, claimed it was not an Australian points-based system, as promoted by UK ministers, but a salary threshold system, which, she argued, would “need to have so many exemptions – for the NHS, for social care and many parts of the private sector – it will be meaningles­s”.

The shadow home secretary added:

“Ultimately, it will also be very difficult to attract the workers we need at all skill levels while the Tories’ hostile environmen­t is in place. It needs to go.”

Stuart Mcdonald, for the SNP, hit out at the “one-size-fits-all” approach, saying it would pose a “very real threat” to Scotland. He added: “Boris Johnson’s crackdown on so-called low-skilled migration will devastate sectors such as hospitalit­y, social care, agricultur­e and scientific research; many key industries across Scotland will no longer have access to vital workers we desperatel­y need.”

Scottish Government Migration Minister Ben Macpherson said: The proposals are an insult to Scotland – they completely disregard the needs of our employers, our public services and our communitie­s.

“There is a clear need for a fundamenta­lly different approach to migration policy to reflect Scotland’s distinct demographi­c and geographic­al needs. The Government promised a system that would deliver for all of the UK yet these proposals do not reflect

The speed and scale of these changes will require significan­t adjustment

the clear evidence from employers, local authoritie­s, universiti­es and experts about their needs. There is not a single reference to Scotland in the document.

“Telling employers they will just need to adjust will be deeply concerning to our agricultur­e sector; to our care sector; and to our transport sector.”

The Liberal Democrats accused the Government of basing its policy on “xenophobia, not the social and economic needs of our country”.

Edinburgh MP Christine Jardine, the party’s home affairs spokeswoma­n, said: “Too many businesses are already struggling to hire the workers they need. Now the Tories want to stop them recruiting all but the highest paid employees from abroad.

“Ten months is nowhere near enough time for either employers or the Home Office to get ready for these new rules, creating chaos and confusion.”

Adam Marshall, for the British Chambers of Commerce, said: “The speed and scale of these changes will require significan­t adjustment by businesses.

“Companies are already investing heavily in home-grown talent across the UK, but critical labour shortages mean firms will still need access to overseas workers at all skill levels.

“The new points system must be able to respond quickly to changing market needs and the applicatio­n process must be radically simplified.”

Christina Mcanea, assistant general secretary of the public services union Unison, said: “These plans spell absolute disaster for the care sector.”

She pointed out companies and councils could not recruit enough staff from the UK so have to rely on care workers from elsewhere.

“But even with these migrant employees, there’s still way too few care workers to meet demand,” she said.

Ms Mcanea said care work was low paid but highly skilled, so fell foul of the Government’s “arbitrary immigratio­n threshold”.

She added: “Suddenly ending this desperatel­y needed supply of labour will cause huge problems across the country. The Government simply has to think again.”

 ??  ?? There are fears that the ban on low-skilled migrants will seriously affect agricultur­e in Scotland at harvest time
There are fears that the ban on low-skilled migrants will seriously affect agricultur­e in Scotland at harvest time

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