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www.ippr.org Dhananjayan Sriskandarajah institute for public policy research BULGARIA AND BRITAIN: A CHANGING RELATIONSHIP Bulgarian Embassy, London, 28 February 2007 Irregular policies on regular migration? The UK’s response to Romanian and Bulgarian accession
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www.ippr.org A changing relationship Migration is central to UK Bulgaria relationship Dramatic rise in the movement of people Estimates suggest more than 100 times increase in migrants since 2001 Second most popular destination for migrants, most of whom go for short periods and few of whom actually work
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www.ippr.org Top 5 overseas property markets 2.Bulgaria 7,456 3.Cyprus5,261 4.France 3,356 5.Turkey 2,608 Source: Total listings on three websites (http://www.worldofproperty.co.uk, http://www.homesoverseas.co.uk and http://www.property-abroad.com) on 13 October 2006.http://www.worldofproperty.co.uk http://www.homesoverseas.co.ukhttp://www.property-abroad.com 1.Spain 23,834
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www.ippr.org Enlarging concerns On paper, free movement within the EU is a good thing Movement of people between UK and Bulgaria should be welcomed as part of European integration Instead, despite evidence of positive impacts, we have restrictive approach towards labour migration Understanding why these ‘irregular’ policies were adopted to manage such ‘regular’ flows is critical
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www.ippr.org Why the volte-face? Rising public anxieties about immigration The need for a ‘pause’ after A8 migration Anxiety over numbers Labour market impacts Impacts on public services Social cohesion being undermined Need to be in control of migration Other EU member policies
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www.ippr.org Rising net inflows
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www.ippr.org Rising EU25 inflows
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www.ippr.org Rising public anxieties Source: Ipsos MORI
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www.ippr.org A8: not so big news? Increase in the stock of migrants from A8 countries, 2003-2006 A8 Migrants aged 16+ A8 migrants in employment A8 migrants’ share in total migrant employment A8 migrant’s share in total employment April-June 2003118,40043,2001.7%0.15% April-June 2004133,70075,1002.9%0.27% April-June 2005222,300150,3005.4%0.53% April-June 2006330,900246,9007.9%0.87% Source: Ruhs 2006 using LFS data, ONS
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www.ippr.org A8: evidence of circularity
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www.ippr.org Labour market impacts A8 labour migration: young, dynamic, filling hard-to-fill jobs Very little evidence of wage dampening; overall wage growth remains healthy No robust link to rising unemployment Evidence of a virtuous of high-growth, low inflation scenario Reduction in illegal working Some evidence of under-employment
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www.ippr.org Public Services and Social Cohesion No ‘benefit shopping’ Filling important public sector roles Overall positive reception Some anecdotal concerns of competition for resources (public services and work) Migrants are moving to areas that have not traditionally experienced migration
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www.ippr.org Implications Contradictions between ‘open’ access to the UK and ‘closed’ access to the labour market May be implicitly promoting irregular working, driving down wages and fuelling vulnerability and criminality Still open to media frenzy around impact of A2 migrants UK Government may still end up looking ‘out of control’ Endorse perceptions and discrimination about Romanians and Bulgarians Undermines the principle and benefits of free movement
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www.ippr.org Dhananjayan Sriskandarajah institute for public policy research BULGARIA AND BRITAIN: A CHANGING RELATIONSHIP Bulgarian Embassy, London, 28 February 2007 Irregular policies on regular migration? The UK’s response to Romanian and Bulgarian accession
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