Neville's Breakfast
Well-known member
Limited immigration does have an appeal. The problem is in the application.
Initially it would seem simple to decide which jobs are skilled and which are not, (Doctor in the former category and hotel cleaner in the latter).
The problems arise somewhere in the middle. If you say IT is a skilled industry, that would appear to be true in the case of coders and engineers, and not the case for data input, but there are lots of grey areas. Ultimately the person making the decision is likely to be a administrator in the civil service, withg no experience or knowledge of the job in question, and an element of box ticking occurs, which is both costly in terms of time and money. There's no evidence that such a system works to the benefit of anyone, as evidenced by 180,000 non EU people coming to work in the UK last year.
Having seen in my own industry (HE) the complete car crash that has arisen in respect of recruiting international students from outside the EU (they are included in the migration stats even though they are paying £12-20k a year to attend courses), I have zero confidence in the politicians making the strategic decisions or the Borders Agency staff administering them. The rules are already very complex, and to extend them to EU students once Brexit occurs will increase the paperwork and reduce the appeal of the UK as a place of excellent learning (Oxford, Cambridge and Imperial are in the top ten of the world).
The ultimate consequence is that the students go elsewhere as the bureacracy and idiocy of politicians and bureaucrats is spectacular.
We have a world class university sector which generates over £7 billion a year from 436,000 international studetns to the UK economy it seems utterly stupid to me. However HE is an industry about which few comment and even less give a shit about as 'people are tired of experts'.
HE is extremely important. i would have thought it would be simple to issue all
International students with student visas for the duration of their course and an offer to stay if they find a job. Isn't that what happens now with non EU students ?
As to the beaurocracy involved in managing borders one could apply the same logic to running the NHS and other public services where administration is required. If the decisions of public servants were that bad then we would all be advocating privatization of just about everything. I agree that there will/would be cost in implementing border control but there are also costs associated with unlimited immigration not least in terms of the price paid by the low paid as wages in many jobs are driven downwards.