A selection of recent media reports

URGENT 'REVIEWS' AT OLD PEOPLE'S HOME
Southwark Council has instructed social workers to make urgent reviews of people it has placed at the old folks' home wh...
Southwark News (11-Mar-2010)
Leicestershire police hunt for lorry stowaways
Organised criminal gangs which force illegal migrants to work in poor conditions for a few pounds a day could be operati...
This is Leicestershire (11-Mar-2010)
America nears 'tipping point' where babies born to minority parents outnumber whites for first time
America is reaching a tipping point when the babies born to minority parents outnumber whites for the first time. More ...
Daily Mail (11-Mar-2010)
Frosty Welcome For UK Electronic Borders Plan
Government claims over the roll-out of its new electronic border controls are 'not credible', according to opposition pa...
97.4rockfm (11-Mar-2010)
ILLEGAL IMMIGRANT LANDED A JOB IN LORDS
AN illegal immigrant worked in the Houses of Parliament for six months without any security checks, a court was told...
Daily Express (11-Mar-2010)
Gold Service traffickers exposed by The Sun
TODAY The Sun exposes a gang that offers illegal immigrants door-to-door delivery into Britain in a scam which they call...
Online Sun (10-Mar-2010)
Illegal immigrant worked at House of Lords for six months after using fake passport to get kitchen job
An illegal immigrant worked for six months serving lunch at House of Lords after using a fake passport to get the job, a...
Daily Mail (10-Mar-2010)
Fewer asylum seekers to Norway
In February this year 711 asylum seekers arrived in Norway.
The Norway Post (10-Mar-2010)
Brown meets MP over flats deaths
Prime Minister Gordon Brown will meet an MP to hear how a community coped following the apparent suicide of three asylum...
Press Association (10-Mar-2010)
WILLIAM HAGUE: LABOUR HAVE BLED US DRY
THE Shadow Foreign Secretary speaks to Daily Express readers about Gordon Brown s appalling regime and how the Tories pl...
Daily Express (10-Mar-2010)
Lumley named in row over Gurkha charity
Minister attacks campaigner's 'silence' as inquiry is launched into donations solicited in...
The Independent (10-Mar-2010)
Team in war on night crime
WAR has been declared on Newham's night-time crime economy. Police, the council and immigration oficers are working tog...
Newham Recorder (09-Mar-2010)
Homes help for asylum seekers
AN Oldham vicar is helping to lead a campaign to improve housing conditions for asylum seekers in the North-West. Rever...
Oldham Evening Chronicle (09-Mar-2010)
The battle for a Yorkshire marginal
As the Conservative candidate in a marginal seat, I see that while BNP support is a threat, the Labour vote has...
Guardian Unlimited - Comment is Free (09-Mar-2010)
Bates Wells hip hop lawyer wins Snoop Dogg immigration battle
Bates Wells & Braithwaite has paved the way for US rapper Snoop Dogg to enter the UK after a long-running battle wit...
The Lawyer.com (09-Mar-2010)
Social Care: Foreign and destitute
Around 20,000 asylum-seeking families are living in destitution in the UK. Nancy Rowntree asks whether the system needs ...
cypnow (09-Mar-2010)
Boarding Schools Association: 'still has concerns' over Tier 4 system
Despite a relatively smooth rollout of the new Tier 4 system for the immigration of international (non-EEA) students, th...
Politics.co.uk (09-Mar-2010)
Councils attacked for giving too much information on asylum-seeking children to UKBA
Local authorities have been accused of supplying more information on asylum-seeking children than they should to the UK ...
Community Care (09-Mar-2010)
Figures that reveal the cost of life for those with no hiding place
Asylum is protection given by a country to someone who is fleeing persecution in their own country. It is given under th...
Times Online (09-Mar-2010)
Asylum is a complex and emotive issue that will never satisfy everyone
If we can be sure of anything, it is that the mysterious and harrowing tale of the Russian family who jumped from a Glas...
Times Online (09-Mar-2010)

Employment 3.5

Toughening the points based system

Summary

1 With unemployment climbing fast, it is no longer acceptable that jobs which have never been advertised in Britain should be offered to economic migrants. Nor should migrants be admitted without a job to go to. The total of these categories is at least 75,000 jobs a year and probably a good deal more. These arrangements should be suspended while the recession lasts.

Introduction

2 It is not generally realised that a significant number of work permits are issued to foreign economic migrants without the job being advertised in Britain or in the EU and that a considerable number of economic migrants are admitted without a job to go to.

The work permit system

3 The Points Based System, being introduced on 27 November 2008, includes three categories of worker who can take a job in Britain without it having been advertised locally. They are as follows:

(a) Shortage occupations

Where the government declares that an occupation is "a shortage occupation" sponsoring companies can import foreign labour without advertising the jobs first. There is no limit on numbers. Nor is there any reliable way of the government knowing when the shortage has been filled. The Migration Advisory Committee has listed occupations which account for approximately 700,000 employees in the UK. This compares to 1m on the previous list but they have identified a risk that the take up may be higher.

(b) Intra-company transfers

Multi-national companies are allowed to transfer their employees to the UK provided they have worked for the sponsoring company for at least six months. They are supposed to have knowledge specific to that company but there is no requirement for the job to be advertised first in Britain. A report by the Trade Union, Amicus, in 2006 found that, of the 30,000 work permits issued in 2005 for IT occupations, 75% were for Intra Company Transfers and 80 % of the total were from India. [1]

(c) International students

Students who have studied for a full-time degree in the UK are entitled to stay and work for two years without sponsorship. After two years they must switch into work permit employment, but if they have been working for at least six months, the employer will not have to advertise the job. To qualify they need only be aged under 28 and earning 23,000 a year. As the average salary for a UK graduate is about 21,000, this is not a high hurdle. These international graduates will be in direct competition with British graduates who will have incurred heavy debts in acquiring their degrees.

4 There are also two categories who can work having arrived without a job offer:

(a) Tier 1

Permits are granted on the basis of age, qualifications, previous earnings and previous work experience. The applicant must also satisfy English language and maintenance requirements. However, they can, and do, arrive without a job to go to, and there is not even a requirement that the job they take should be skilled.

(b) Dependants

The dependants of all the previous four categories can apply for a National Insurance number and can then work in Britain.

Numbers

5 The number of workers admitted under these categories in 2007 was as follows:

- Shortage occupation 8,400
- Intra-company transfer 38,100
- Students Not known
- Tier 1 30,250
- Dependants of the above Not known

6 In the first nine months of 2008 about 48,500 applications were granted for Tier 1 or its predecessor the Highly Skilled Migrant Programme, two thirds of the applications were in country, allowing the holder to stay on even if made redundant by the present employer. 43% went to Indian nationals. The government do not appear to know how many dependants are working. [2]

7 On a longer time frame, an investigation by the Statistics Commission, an independent watchdog, in December 2007 found that:

The number of people in employment increased between 1997 and 2007 by 2.7 million (counting all over 16s) The actual proportion of the employment increase accounted for by foreigners/migrants ranges from just over 50% when looking at foreign nationals and the 16+ age group to just over 80% when looking at country of birth and excluding workers who are over state pension age. [3]

Proposals for toughening the points based system

8 The Balanced Migration Group believe that, in present economic circumstances any job offered to an economic migrant should first be properly advertised in Britain and the EEA. Furthermore, workers should no longer be allowed to enter Britain on spec without a job to go to. To achieve this we propose the following:

(a) Suspend the shortage occupation category.

There is no means of knowing when the shortage has been filled. Nor is there any reason why such jobs should not be advertised first. This would allow British workers to switch into these occupations.

(b) Intra-company transfers.

This needs tightening. Six months previous employment is far too short. It should be two years. There should also be a ceiling on individual companies, taking account of the size of their existing work force. Recent research by the Trades Union, Amicus, found that one UK company with its headquarters in India had sponsored over 10,000 such transfers in five years. [4]

c) Students.

Foreign students should be required to seek a work permit if they wish to stay on and work. This would mean that the job had first to be advertised locally.

(d) Suspend Tier 1.

With unemployment climbing, there is no case for admitting economic migrants "on spec".

(e) Dependants.

Dependants who wish to work should apply separately for a work permit.

The resident labour market test

9 This test, applied to all other work permit applications, is far too loose for present circumstances. It requires that the job be advertised, for example in a trade journal, for only two weeks. If the salary is over 40,000, then one week is deemed sufficient.

10 The system also has some bizarre outcomes. Provided the job has been advertised for two weeks, an applicant who is offered a salary of 24,000 a year needs no qualifications at all to obtain a work permit. (The job has to be skilled but it is hard for the authorities to know what work an employee is actually doing). The applicant also has to have funds of 800 and speak rudimentary English to the lowest international standard. This also needs to be tightened to ensure that genuine skills are always a requirement.

The English language test

11 The English language test for Tier 2 is A1 of the Council of Europe Scale. A1 sounds impressive but it is, in fact about the lowest possible international standard. There is a strong case for setting a higher standard if economic migrants are to be able to integrate effectively in our society.

10 November, 2008

Notes

  1. “The impact of the work permit scheme on IT professionals in the UK”. July 2006
  2. Hansard 23 Oct 2008 Questions 227448 and 227450. Information “not available”.
  3. Statistics Commission. Foreign workers in the UK Briefing note. December 2007.
  4. See footnote 1