For reasons of domestic politics, leaders of some member states
ignore the historic achievements that have taken place since the fall of the
Berlin Wall, and how much worse the outcome could have been without the
accession of 13 countries to the EU in 2004, 2007, and 2013. Some leaders, who
now argue for new restrictions on free movement, were among those who pushed
most strongly for the Union to expand from 12 members in 1995 to the current
28. Austerity have failed to meet citizens' concerns about the recession and people
have understandable concerns about the impact of free movement because the
crisis and the impact of austerity have made them vulnerable and fearful for their
own prospects. Populists seek to divide their nationals from EU citizens of
other member countries. They want to drive a wedge between nationals and
"foreigners." Populists paint a picture of free movement as a threat,
bringing hordes of "benefit tourists" who abuse the system and are a
burden on social provision. Unlike the general narrative presented by populists
access by EU citizens to welfare benefits is not an unrestricted right. No EU
citizen can reside in another EU country without working or studying and simply
claim benefits there unconditionally. During the first three months of
residence the host Member State is not obliged by EU law to grant social
assistance to economically inactive EU citizens. Nor is it obliged to grant
social assistance to first-time jobseekers. Germany – not the UK – is officially the main
destination of free movement within the European Union, a study suggests. Nearly
30 per cent of migrants taking advantage of free-movement rules inside the EU
in 2012 travelled to Germany, compared with just 7 per cent of such migrants
who moved to Britain, the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and
Development said.
Cameron insists that child benefit to children living abroad
will halt but has he considered the alternative that it is the case it is cheaper
for the state to pay the child benefit rather than having to pay for all the
various education and medical costs of children if they were to come into the
country. Migrants want to find work and when they work they pay taxes so why
shouldn’t they be entitled to the same entitlements?
Some left nationalists argue for work quotas and
restrictions on migrants arriving for work and they argue that the present
rules favour the employers but as the economist Joan Robinson put it: “The misery
of being exploited by capitalists is nothing compared to the misery of not
being exploited at all.” But the main
argument is that increased competition for work decreases the bargaining power
of local workers. Supposing such regulations were introduced, employers would
simply adjust and it would be to the detriment of all. Abandoning free movement
may well bring back the era of seasonal work, when men and women from all over
Europe are recruited on a temporary basis, live in barrack-like accommodation
isolated and away from the centres of population, and are not allowed to bring
family members with them. As soon as the work is finished, they will be sent
back home. They will have none of the rights now enjoyed by foreign workers
under free movement. It would be a return to that era where everything is
geared up to make it as cheap as possible, and to get labour as cheap as
possible.
It is unscrupulous employers, not workers, who set lower and
even illegal wages, promote and profit from social dumping and the black market
in labour. Governments can strengthen national laws on unfair dismissal and
shorten qualifying periods to prevent exploitation, enforce minimum wage laws,
ensuring that breaches are subject to strict sanctions, and guarantee the right
to union membership. But that approach goes against the wishes of employers. When
workers unite for fair pay and conditions, it strengthens the position of all
workers.
The reason we have immigration now is a market dynamic, not
because our laws are too lax. We will have migrant labour in the future, legal
or otherwise, because the market demands relative low wage labour and there are
people for whom our low wage is their good wage.
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