Britain heralds end of 'cheap labor from Europe' with
Brexit immigration system
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[February 19, 2020] By
Kylie MacLellan
LONDON (Reuters) - Britain will prioritize
access for high-skilled workers from around the world in its post-Brexit
points-based immigration system, the government said on Tuesday, setting
out its plans to put an end to a reliance on "cheap labor from Europe".
Concern over the impact of high levels of immigration from the European
Union was one of the key drivers behind Britain's 2016 vote to leave the
bloc and the government has said it plans to bring overall migration
numbers down.
The new system, in place from Jan. 1, 2021, will assign points for
specific skills, qualifications, salaries or professions and only give
visas to those who have enough points. It will treat EU and non-EU
citizens the same.
It will mark a sea change for businesses who have grown used to having
access to a large pool of EU workers, particularly since 2004 when the
accession of several former communist states in central and eastern
Europe saw a big influx of migrants coming to Britain to work.
"We have got a number of routes through the points-based immigration
scheme that will enable people to come here with the right kind of
skills that can support our country and our economy," interior minister
Priti Patel said.
But business groups said that many firms relied on overseas labor and
cautioned there might not be enough domestic workers to tend crops, care
for patients and serve food - a deficit that could undermine the world's
fifth largest economy.
Britain's fruit and vegetable sector, for example, relies on up to
80,000 seasonal workers from the EU each year, but the government said
its Seasonal Workers Pilot scheme would have just 10,000 places.
The Home Office said it would follow a recommendation made last month by
the Migration Advisory Committee (MAC), an independent body which
advises the government, to lower the minimum general salary threshold
for skilled migrants to 25,600 pounds ($33,330) a year, from 30,000
pounds.
[to top of second column] |
Britain's Home Secretary Priti Patel looks on as Britain's Prime
Minister Boris Johnson chairs a cabinet meeting at the National
Glass Centre at the University of Sunderland, Sunderland, Britain
January 31, 2020. Paul Ellis/Pool via REUTERS
Skilled workers will need to meet criteria including the ability to speak
English and will need to have a job offer.
There will be no specific entry route for low-skilled workers, something the
government hopes will help reduce the number of migrants.
"We need to shift the focus of our economy away from reliance on cheap labor
from Europe and instead concentrate on investment in technology and automation.
Employers will need to adjust," the government said in a policy document.
The MAC estimated the impact of the government's planned salary and skills
thresholds would mean around 70% of European Economic Area citizens who have
arrived in Britain since 2004 would not have been eligible for a visa.
Immigration from the EU has been falling since the 2016 Brexit vote, with
official figures showing net migration by EU citizens in the year to June at its
lowest since quarterly records began in 2009.
The government did not give a target level for annual net migration under its
new system. Former Conservative governments have aimed for under 100,000 a year
and net migration is currently running at just over double that.
EU citizens will not need a visa to enter Britain as a visitor for up to six
months.
Students will be covered by the points-based system, the government said, while
there will be separate initiatives for scientists, graduates, National Health
Service workers and those in the agricultural sector.
(Editing by Guy Faulconbridge and Toby Chopra)
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