Businesses uneasy over new immigration plan
Business leaders in the UK have reacted with unease after Prime Minister Boris Johnson outlined the points-based immigration system he intends to introduce if the Conservatives win Thursday's general election.
She added: “It’s a lot more restrictive than free movement, so for certain employers there would still probably be difficulties transitioning from a system where there’s no bureaucracy attached and where they can hire people very easily, to one where they’d have to hire people temporarily or not at all.“I don’t want to suggest that there’s no change. It is a more restrictive system than the one we have now, on the whole. But, by international standards, I would say it’s a relatively mainstream system.”
Jonathan Portes, professor of economics at King’s College London and senior fellow at the research group UK in a Changing Europe, said the proposals were "not radical" and might eventually not look too different from the existing system.But he added: “There’s a damaging misconception in this debate that there’s a binary divide between the brain surgeons and the people who pick strawberries. Most ordinary immigrants are somewhere in between - doing jobs that require skills but aren’t necessarily highly skilled - and they would not pass this particular test.“Butchers for example or people who work in abattoirs – this is hard work and you need training. Most come from Eastern Europe but are unlikely to make the highly skilled cut.”Prof Portes said Mr Johnson's and other ministers' use of the phrase “Australian-style” points system was misleading because the UK plan did not include an essential element of the Australian system.
“If you score certain points for your qualifications, then Australia will let you in without a job offer. Johnson isn’t proposing that for the UK. If he was, then that would be radical,” he said.
Read more news and views from David Sapsted.
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