• Visitors can check out the Forum FAQ by clicking this link. You have to register before you can post: click the REGISTER link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. View our Forum Privacy Policy.
  • Want to receive the latest contracting news and advice straight to your inbox? Sign up to the ContractorUK newsletter here. Every sign up will also be entered into a draw to WIN £100 Amazon vouchers!

You are not logged in or you do not have permission to access this page. This could be due to one of several reasons:

  • You are not logged in. If you are already registered, fill in the form below to log in, or follow the "Sign Up" link to register a new account.
  • You may not have sufficient privileges to access this page. Are you trying to edit someone else's post, access administrative features or some other privileged system?
  • If you are trying to post, the administrator may have disabled your account, or it may be awaiting activation.

Previously on "Immigration thread to re-balance the forum"

Collapse

  • PAH
    replied
    Originally posted by Cowboy Bob View Post
    I beg to differ...

    Learn some better tunes, and you'll get more money from the busking. Also helps if you have a proper instrument and not just a couple of missing teeth and a rolled up copy of the Big Issue.

    Leave a comment:


  • Cowboy Bob
    replied
    Originally posted by Xenophon View Post
    Don't be silly, expat. People from Yorkshire can't afford to move to London.
    I beg to differ...

    Leave a comment:


  • Diver
    replied
    Originally posted by PAH View Post
    Today it's not who they are or where they're from, it's the huge numbers. This island is too small and it's being swamped.

    Only 8 years ago I was amazed how quieter it was driving around France and Spain compared to the UK, and it's probably even more noticable today. You could go for many miles without seeing a town or significant population. Here it's getting so all the towns are becoming linked.

    As the saying goes "good fences make good neighbours". As a species we don't like being over crowded, so it's bound to lead to tension and depression.
    Note to self: Must buy more properties to rent out.

    Leave a comment:


  • Sysman
    replied
    Originally posted by zeitghost
    Yes it does.

    If it's sent home, then VAT isn't charged in this country on what it buys...
    Not to mention the extra tax revenues on the profits of the companies collecting that VAT. Also tax/NI contributions from any extra employees required by those companies to deal with the increased workload.

    Leave a comment:


  • expat
    replied
    Originally posted by Board Game Geek View Post
    Fair Do's.
    Thank you. Generously said.

    Out of interest, if and when me and the missus eventually emigrate to NZ, with her taking one of their priority job openings (Quantity Surveyor) and me working in IT, would we be net contributors to their economy ?
    I don't know. I trust you would be contributors to the culture and the country in a wider sense than economic.

    As for contributing to the economy, I asked myself the same thing when I worked in the U.S. My visa was in effect a certificate from Uncle Sam to the effect that I was indeed a net contributor. Likewise I take it that in NZ if you take a priority job it's a job they can't fill all of, so theoretically if you didn't do it then it wouldn't get done. If you weren't there then their economy would be poorer; if you are, it will be correspondingly richer.

    OTOH if you simply do a job that someone else would do anyway, it is not clear that you would be an economic benefit. 3 levels I guess:

    1. if I just take a job that someone else would do anyway, and they then don't work, or work at a lower economic level than the average, then I have cost their economy something no matter what taxes I pay and what I buy.

    2. if I add 1 job and add 1 taxpayer and 1 consumer (or 1 family), all at average rates, then I am neutral to the economy, more or less.

    3. if I add a better job than the average, and do that job, then I am a net benefit to their economy.

    I'm just saying that it is not at all self-evident that even a good worker and honest taxpayer is a benefit: the real wealth of a country as it affects its members is GDP/head, not total GDP.

    Leave a comment:


  • oracleslave
    replied
    Originally posted by OwlHoot View Post
    After a sea food spaghetti at the weekend, and had a bit of a stomach ache a day or two later on my lower abdomen.

    (I thought it would be a normal spaghetti a la vongole [sp?], but turned out to be a huge pile of mussels and winkles still in their shells all mixed up with the spaghetti. Bloody ridiculous and horrible - it took ten minutes to winkle out the contents and ditch the barnacle-encrusted shells - talk about "pick your own").

    I thought the ache might be appendicitis, and spent a couple of hours reading up on it, dreading having to go to hospital (for the first time in 40 years) and lose any contracting loot!

    But touch wood, it's gone today, so I must have just pulled a muscle or something and the crappy sea food meal was irrelevant.
    If it was appendicitis trust me you wouldn't have been reading/pottering about. It is f***in painful. Mine burst on the tennis court

    Leave a comment:


  • OwlHoot
    replied
    After a sea food spaghetti at the weekend, and had a bit of a stomach ache a day or two later on my lower abdomen.

    (I thought it would be a normal spaghetti a la vongole [sp?], but turned out to be a huge pile of mussels and winkles still in their shells all mixed up with the spaghetti. Bloody ridiculous and horrible - it took ten minutes to winkle out the contents and ditch the barnacle-encrusted shells - talk about "pick your own").

    I thought the ache might be appendicitis, and spent a couple of hours reading up on it, dreading having to go to hospital (for the first time in 40 years) and lose any contracting loot!

    But touch wood, it's gone today, so I must have just pulled a muscle or something and the crappy sea food meal was irrelevant.

    Leave a comment:


  • Board Game Geek
    replied
    Fair Do's.

    Out of interest, if and when me and the missus eventually emigrate to NZ, with her taking one of their priority job openings (Quantity Surveyor) and me working in IT, would we be net contributors to their economy ?

    Leave a comment:


  • expat
    replied
    Originally posted by Board Game Geek View Post
    Expat,
    (snip)
    Seriously Expat, if you cannot make the distinction between the two immigrants, then I think you should have gone to Specsavers.
    I can make that distinction and don't need specsavers

    I never claimed that all immigrants are economically neutral, or economically identical to each other. I simply disputed what seemed to be Chef's easy assumption that an incomer who works hard legally and pays taxes is necessarily a benefit to the economy.

    It ain't necessarily so. It may be so, but it ain't necessarily so.

    (And I must repeat that I mean no disrespect to Chef or Chef GF, whom I admire for what she is doing: she's welcome here as far as I am concerned).

    Leave a comment:


  • hyperD
    replied
    Originally posted by xoggoth View Post
    Depends who the min waged employees are. Large bottomed nubile ladies rolling in my food would be brill.
    Ah hah, Xoggoth, a sashimi man, eh?

    Leave a comment:


  • xoggoth
    replied
    Depends who the min waged employees are. Large bottomed nubile ladies rolling in my food would be brill.

    Leave a comment:


  • hyperD
    replied
    Originally posted by oracleslave View Post
    your

    Unless you're doing something unusual with the food
    Curses!

    Should have used the <Fleetwood> spelling shield!

    Nice avatar btw oracleslave!

    Leave a comment:


  • oracleslave
    replied
    Originally posted by hyperD View Post
    Feel for you... not a pleasant illness..

    I fear though that it could be in the sandwiches... and probably through transference. The specialist reckoned it was the chinese waiters using their hands to pick up ice cubes to make our drinks.

    Who knows... it was only a few months ago that the supplier, London-based Katsouris, a unit of Icelandic food group Bakkavor, provided salmonella infected hummus to Sainsbury's, Somerfield, Tesco, Waitrose and the Co-op.

    hyperD's top tip: never eat processed food - spend a few mins and make it yourself. It's cheaper and you won't get minimum waged employees rubbing their sticky fingers over you food.
    your

    Unless you're doing something unusual with the food

    Leave a comment:


  • hyperD
    replied
    Originally posted by Board Game Geek View Post
    The only other thing I ate Monday was a Sainbury's Wilshire Ham and Mustard pre-packed sandwich.
    Feel for you... not a pleasant illness..

    I fear though that it could be in the sandwiches... and probably through transference. The specialist reckoned it was the chinese waiters using their hands to pick up ice cubes to make our drinks.

    Who knows... it was only a few months ago that the supplier, London-based Katsouris, a unit of Icelandic food group Bakkavor, provided salmonella infected hummus to Sainsbury's, Somerfield, Tesco, Waitrose and the Co-op.

    hyperD's top gastronomic tip: never eat processed food - spend a few mins and make it yourself. It's cheaper and you won't get minimum waged employees rubbing their sticky fingers over your food.

    Leave a comment:


  • Board Game Geek
    replied
    Chinese food?

    Sorry to hear that - I had that and found it was the quickest way to lose 2 stone in 2 weeks with a haemorrhaged bowel. Closed the chinese restaurant down as it had been reported as an outbreak to the local authorities as so many people were ill at the same time.
    No idea. It came on very quickly on Monday evening. Missus has been unaffected so it's something I have eaten.

    All I had on Monday night was egg, ham and chips. The ham was sourced from a local farmers market, as were the eggs. We both had some of the eggs on Saturday as well as some ham, so it cannot be that.

    The only other thing I ate Monday was a Sainbury's Wilshire Ham and Mustard pre-packed sandwich.

    Whatever it was, it has been blimming awful and the doc reckons 5 days to get back on track (or longer for those with immuno suppressed illnesses)

    Leave a comment:

Working...
X