robbiekeane
Well-Known Member
It’s down to Ukraine and Hong Kong though.
And you never hear them mentioned. Coeverly and Dorries were at least honest enough to admit last night the targets they set were a nonsense that could never be met.
until someone can verbalise exactly who it is we want to stop coming in we will get nowhere.
The economics can be argued in a variety of different ways, I certainly agree that net zero migration is silly. The concept that all our services won't be worse off if we imported 20 million people tomorrow is also silly however.
You've also got the cultural aspects. We've got a proud tradition and heritage. I don't see why we would want to erase that. We're already seeing massive demographic changes in many places in the UK and I think it bothers a lot of people. Whether they'll admit it is another matter, for obvious reasons, but it's a worthy debating point.
I would also flip it the other way as I think there's many people that want open borders, but try and mud the waters with the economical arguments whilst simultaneously throwing the racist card out at anyone who challenges it.
Ideally we have a sensible approach to it and have a healthy level of immigration. People will quickly shut up about it and then we can concentrate on other much more important things.
While the Hong Kong situation and UKraine did contribute significantly in 2023, it’s actually still a smaller piece of the overall gross immigration numbers. The gross immigration number was about 1.1 million.
Of that, there were about 500k international students (due to the 2020 Graduate route) and about 500k on work visas predominantly driven by the need for health care workers.
This is the reason I was trying to dig a little into what people are most concerned with.
Are people fed up of students? If you wiped off the international student visas, your net immigration would be around zero. But would that make people happy? I’d hope not because one of the key arguments in favour of immigration is increasing the quality of human capital through skilled immigration (@Earlsdon_Skyblue1 i know you mentioned people get fuzzy on the actual arguments for it, that would be one of mine).
So then I look to the work visas, and most of this as mentioned is driven through the need for health workers and social care workers. So…this is actually a problem we have created ourselves by chronically underfunding the health care system. But still, it’s filling a gap in the labour market that we have. So is this something people still want to address, and if so is it just then the cultural considerations that ESB mentioned?