The growth in the world’s migrant population is far more
rapid than the growth in the total population. Over the same 40-year period to
2005, the world population doubled while the migrant population grew by 3
times. However, cross-border migration captures only a fraction of the world’s
total migrant population. From a strict economic perspective there is little
difference between cross-border migration and internal migration. This is
especially the case when internal or rural-to-urban migration encompasses vast
distances and differences of language or dialect. According to China’s National
Bureau of Statistics in 2008 there were 285 million internal migrants in China.
This is far larger than the world’s total number of cross-border migrants. For
the migrants themselves this frequently encompasses far greater geographical
distances than is required, say, from Eastern Europe. In India the level of
internal migration is over 300 million people according to UNESCO. India’s
growth is below that of China, but still growing at a considerable rate The
rate of internal migration in both countries has been a necessary accompaniment
to high economic growth. Migration is a key part of the division of labour,
allowing workers to migrate where production (and wages and jobs) are
expanding. Growth attracts immigration but is also increased by it. The
proportion of workers leaving a country will increases when there is an
economic downturn and the proportion of the workforce arriving from overseas
will tend to decrease. Workers follow capital to the most developed areas to
meet the demand for wage labour in urban centres of capitalist expansion in an,
attempt to escape poverty and unemployment. Likewise the British capitalist class
had little use for immigration controls for most of the 19th century. The
'free' approach to immigration flourished as British capitalism expanded.
During the boom years of the industrial revolution British capitalism possessed
with an insatiable thirst for workers, if only to throw them back into
unemployment in times of slump. Britain's employers showed little interest in
the national or ethnic 'character' of the labour power which they acquired for the
expanding British economy. However, by the turn of the century Britain’s industry was increasingly undermined by
cheaper imports from abroad, suffering deep economic recession. The 1905 Aliens
Act institutionalised the idea that immigrants alone were responsible for the
rapidly deteriorating conditions which most workers were suffering.
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In reality the present debate on immigration in Britain is
not about the economic causes and consequences of immigration at all. The new
migrants get jobs, contribute to the economy, pay taxes, don’t use many public
services, and don’t take jobs from natives.
What, exactly, is the problem? Only under capitalism can the arrival of
young people eager to work, able to produce goods or services far in excess of
what they as individuals could consume themselves, and so make a real contribution
to raising overall living standards, be seen as a problem. How ridiculous is
that?
Free movement of workers was one of the key principles (the
“four freedoms”) set out in the 1957 Treaty of Rome So when the UK joined the
EU, it was entirely understood that free movement was a fundamental part of the
deal. Free movement is an absolute right within the EU, so we couldn’t stop the
new citizens coming here; we could only stop them (for a while) working
legally. The assumption was that if we did so, they’d still come, and still
work, just not legally. This hardly
seemed like an attractive alternative.
Leaving aside the non- negotiability of this fundamental
pillar of the EU, both the Conservative and Labour should surely support free
movement of workers. Why would anyone from the Labour Party which claims to represent the interests
of workers choose this of the “four freedoms” to seek to undermine; do they
really want an EU where goods, capital, and services (the other three) can move
freely, but workers can’t? On the Conservative side, it also seems odd that
representatives of a pro-employer party which often criticises the EU for
imposing unnecessary regulatory restrictions on business should seek to
restrict the right of EU businesses to employ whichever EU citizens are best
suited for the available jobs.
It is overwhelmingly a ‘debate’ that allows politicians and
others to whip up xenophobia and racism, while posing as being concerned about
the interests of workers or the poor. The media is very fond of stories about
immigrants 'fiddling' the benefits system. The cause of migration is growth, to
which migration is a decisive contributor. It is true that the UK has a
persistent problem with youth unemployment and inactivity – and that this was
true even before the recession. But research suggests that this has little or
nothing to do with immigration; it is about educational under-performance among
disadvantaged young people while at school, the poor quality of much post-16
education for those who are not going to university, and our neglect of the
school-to-work transition. And it is
just as bad (often worse) in areas where there are few immigrants as in areas
where there are many. In addition many critics of immigration tend to focus on
the supposedly local effects of it, particularly that they drive down wages.
These arguments are a rehash of notions which opposed the growth of women in
the workforce and even supported restricting their wages relative to men. If
only we had stopped those Poles from coming to Britain, our wages would be so
much higher and therefore those Bulgarians and Romanians should be turned away,
the argument goes. Some on the Left raise this version of opposing immigration:
socialists defend workers' wages and conditions, which are under attack because
there are too many workers competing for too few jobs. So we should support restrictions
on immigrant labour as they keep telling us. The fact that Labour Party and
trade union leaders have always supported immigration controls means that such ideas
about immigration gain a hearing among workers. They have also given credence
and respectability to the racist notion that immigrants come to Britain to
'scrounge' off the welfare state, at the expense of 'British' workers. Jack
Straw hit the nail on the head when as far back as 1995 he said that “you
couldn't get a cigarette paper between Labour and the Tories over the question
of immigration”. The Labour Party has
simply pandered to the claims about
'bogus' asylum seekers and Eastern European ‘benefit tourists’ desperate to
convince any potentially racist voters that Labour, too, will be 'tough' on
immigration.
Are immigrants really preventing British workers from
getting more pay?
What Marx called the reserve army of labour, a surplus of
disposable workers, is intrinsic to capitalism. The reserve army of labour
helps capitalists hold down wages because it increases competition for jobs,
forcing workers to sell themselves for less and to work harder for fear of
being replaced. It is part and parcel of the system, wired into it from its
very birth - and not something created by immigration. By its very nature
capitalism pits workers against each other, forcing them to compete for jobs
and money, rather than cooperating for the common good. If we make the mistake
of blaming the reserve army on immigrants, we might as well say that all
unemployed people should be made to leave the country - and there are 1.7
million of them, by the way, overwhelmingly British - because they all put
pressure on wages, regardless of their nationality. The bosses benefit when
workers accuse each other of causing low wages. Pinning this on foreigners is
simply another way in which the capitalists, helped by their obedient media and
a nasty dose of racism, encourage workers to turn against each other rather
than against the system that breeds poverty and joblessness.
An obvious example of this was in 1945 when the Australian
Labor government announced a programme to import some 50,000 British child
migrants and “white alien children” to meet the need for post-war labour. They
would be housed in converted military bases and air force camps, then in
hostels. The economic and racial objectives underpinning the program were
summed up six years earlier by Redmond Prendiville, the Catholic Archbishop of
Perth, in a speech to British children arriving on the SS Strathaird: “At a
time when empty cradles are contributing woefully to empty spaces, it is
necessary to look for external sources of supply. And if we do not supply from
our own stock we are leaving ourselves all the more exposed to the menace of
the teeming millions of our neighbouring Asiatic races.” A 1953 report by the
British government’s Overseas Migration Board criticised local authorities for
not sending enough children. In 2009, the Australian Prime Minister Kevin Rudd of
the time told child migrants, “the laws of our nation failed you.” But the laws
of the nation worked then, as now, just as intended: upholding the economic and
political power of the ruling class and reserving its greatest repression for
the most oppressed and vulnerable sections of the population.
Marx argued that trade unions - not immigration controls -
are the means by which workers can fight the adverse consequences of labour
market competition. Workers, he said, should "organise a regular
co-operation between employed and unemployed in order to destroy or weaken the
ruinous effects of this natural law of capitalistic production on their
class".
If the reformists within the mainstream parties were true to
their own principles what they would be doing to really help workers to raise
wages and improve conditions is much stricter enforcement of worker protection
and anti-discrimination laws. Funding
used for immigration enforcement and border control could be given instead to
the relevant health and safety, minimum wage inspectors and other labour law enforcement departments. However, it is the socialists who remind us
all that fighting xenophobia and racism means fighting the system which
produces the conditions for it to grow, namely capitalism. Immigration and attempts
at its control are intrinsic parts of the capitalist system.
In any sane system of running the economy, industry would
exist to satisfy human need. But under capitalism humans exist to satisfy the
needs of profit. under capitalism there will never be a happy time when workers
can start to work less, relax and enjoy the fruits of the extraordinary
technological progress that capitalism has produced. We will always face
pressures to tighten our belts, raise productivity and look over our shoulders
at the other workers with whom we are competing. New technology has opened up
the prospect of a life in which machines work for people, not the other way
round, and where work is shared so everyone can enjoy fruitful, fulfilling
labour and ample leisure.
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