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[Merged]Brexit stuff

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    Thought it was backsliding when I saw the headlines, but reading the articles think she may be being sensible.

    A points-based system would give foreign nationals the right to come to Britain if they meet certain criteria: an immigration system that works for Britain would ensure that the right to decide who comes to the country resides with the government.”
    https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/...britain-brexit

    There should be minimal requirements set. I'd include speaking English, good health, no significant criminal record, acceptance of our main values - democracy and secular society etc. and an ability and willingness to integrate. But otherwise it depends where the shortages are and who we need at any time.
    bloggoth

    If everything isn't black and white, I say, 'Why the hell not?'
    John Wayne (My guru, not to be confused with my beloved prophet Jeremy Clarkson)

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      Originally posted by xoggoth View Post
      Thought it was backsliding when I saw the headlines, but reading the articles think she may be being sensible.



      https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/...britain-brexit

      There should be minimal requirements set. I'd include speaking English, good health, no significant criminal record, acceptance of our main values - democracy and secular society etc. and an ability and willingness to integrate. But otherwise it depends where the shortages are and who we need at any time.
      Unfortunately it will mean the dead hand of Government managing the bureaucracy of the application process.
      Let us not forget EU open doors immigration benefits IT contractors more than anyone

      Comment


        Originally posted by AtW View Post
        So you don't want to use points system to make sure only the best candidates get in?
        As per Xog's post below: we let in who we need and we decide. There's no point in letting in 10 great architects if we need nurses.

        Comment


          Originally posted by GB9 View Post
          As per Xog's post below: we let in who we need and we decide. There's no point in letting in 10 great architects if we need nurses.
          How do you decide who will get in without some kinds of analytical points based system that would let in best people?

          Comment


            Originally posted by DodgyAgent View Post
            Unfortunately it will mean the dead hand of Government managing the bureaucracy of the application process.
            Quite. And employers who don't want red tape will simply move their offices to a European location where they can hire who they want. With the added bonus of accessing a much larger market. The brains will follow them.

            Globalisation means a a global market for talent.
            Hard Brexit now!
            #prayfornodeal

            Comment


              Originally posted by sasguru View Post
              Quite. And employers who don't want red tape will simply move their offices to a European location where they can hire who they want. With the added bonus of accessing a much larger market. The brains will follow them.

              Globalisation means a a global market for talent.
              There are a couple of points here. Firstly it is a myth that high end skills move freely around the EU. Albeit this is research from a few years ago the skills needed do not move.

              http://www.hwwi.org/fileadmin/hwwi/P...NG_ANSICHT.pdf



              Highly skilled migrants are in some cases buying their job by working below their formal qualifications
              at the new place of work. At the same time, a job for which they are actually overqualified
              is the better choice for them, provided this represents the (only) alternative to unemployment
              in the short run.
              • In addition, the gap between skills offered and those demanded by the labour market widened
              rapidly during the crisis, especially in the crisis-hit countries but also in the eurozone overall. The
              skill mismatch implies high structural deficits on the labour markets in the eurozone that cannot
              be overcome by more labour mobility alone.
              • The rising average age of the population is likely to dampen labour mobility within Europe in
              the future. This makes it all the more important to address structural reforms in order to boost
              employment growth in Europe and the eurozone.
              • Mobility within Europe remains a complex phenomenon, driven by a range of factors. For this
              reason, it is also hard to predict migration flows going forward


              I cannot think of the other point
              Last edited by DodgyAgent; 5 September 2016, 13:19.
              Let us not forget EU open doors immigration benefits IT contractors more than anyone

              Comment


                Originally posted by AtW View Post
                How do you decide who will get in without some kinds of analytical points based system that would let in best people?
                What's this thing you have about the 'best' people? It's the most appropriate people that we want. We may ask for nurses with certain qualifications if that's what is required at the time. That wouldn't allow in architects, predominantly because they wouldn't be nurses.

                Under a purely points based system we could get the best architects but no nurses. Not a fat lot of use if we already have architects and no nurses!

                Comment


                  Originally posted by GB9 View Post
                  What's this thing you have about the 'best' people? It's the most appropriate people that we want. We may ask for nurses with certain qualifications if that's what is required at the time.
                  So would you prefer a nurse with certain required qualification plus 10 years of experience plus English to level of IELTS 7 or would you instead take nurse who just graduated with IELTS score of 5.5?

                  Comment


                    Tier 2 ICT visas are capped too, but the ones that don't lead to ILR aren't, just get kicked out after five years.

                    Comment


                      If there is a quota system it sounds very "Soviet Union", with politicians deciding who we need. This approach means some businesses will get their people and others won't.

                      At the moment businesses decide who they want and they get them. When the new rules come in they'll have spend a huge amount of time discussing their open positions with bureaucrats and politicians.

                      A bureaucrat at the immigration dept, has absolutely no idea about the suitability of a candidate for a particular job, and nor does he have any idea about how whether job A or job B is more or less important for the economy. In effect bureaucrats will decide which businesses fail or succeed.
                      Last edited by BlasterBates; 5 September 2016, 13:44.
                      I'm alright Jack

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