Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Eastern European Migration
- Eight Eastern European member countries joined the EU of May 1st 2004
- A8 countries
- Czech Republic
- Estonia
- Hungary
- Latvia
- Lithuania
- Poland
- Slovenia
- Slovakia
- UK guest work force has steadily risen since 2004
- However slowed down by 2007
- Possibly due to the UK credit crunch
- 8% migrants in Scotland
- 4% Migrants in Northern Ireland
- 10% migrants in Northeast England
- 19% migrants in Northern England
- 3% migrants in Wales
- 12% migrants in Midlands
- 15% of migrants in Eastern England
- 13% migrants in London
- 7% migrants in Southeast England
- 9% migrants in Southwest England
- In Tesco there is now an aisle especially for Polish Produce
- The EU has an open border policy for trade and people
- The Schengen agreement was set up in 1995
- Over 200,000 immigrants arrived in the UK in 2004-5
- Eastern Europeans get paid on average £6 an hour
- In 2005, unemployment in Poland was 18.5% with some rural area's over 40%
- UK is not a Schengen member
- UKs unemployment rate is only 5.1%
- Poland GDP is $12,700
- UK GDP is $30,900
- £2.54 billion is contributed to the economy annually by Eastern European immigrants in the UK
- Migrants have contributed 0.5 to 1% of the UKs economic growth in 2005-6
- 80% of new
migrants are
working people
between the
ages of 18 and
35
- The bank of England stated that
migration had helped to prevent the
rapid rise in oil prices from causing
a damaging surge of inflation
- Push factors
- Unemployment
- Lack of safety
- Lack of services
- Poverty
- Crop failure
- Drought
- War/Civil unrest
- Hazards
- Isolation
- Population pressure
- Poor infrastructure
- Bad education
- Poor health care
- Poor weather
- Rising crime
- Pull factors
- In 2004, A8
countries
were not
given the right
of free
movement
except by the
UK, Ireland
and Sweden
- The developed
economy of the UK is
a magnet for migrants
seeking work and
opportunities
- A growing, low-unemployed economy
- Higher
education
- Greater wealth
- Better standard of living
- Fertile land
- Source Country
- Benefits
- Remittances: Workers
send 25% of earnings
home - Poland sent
home 6.4 million euros in
2006
- Unemployment
may be reduced
- Higher wages, A8 migrants
average £6 per house
- Skills can
be taken
back home
- Working A8
migrants
abroad do not
need benefit
payments
- Less
pressure on
resources
- Costs
- Loss of work force
- Brain drain
- Skills shortages
- Ageing and reduced fertility
- Most migrants are young
males creating inbalance
- Some workers are exploited
- Breaks up
families
- Economic growth may slow
- Host Country
- Benefits
- Skills gaps
- Economic turnaround
- Business opportunities
- Counteracts aging if migrants have children
- Multi- cultural society
- Reduces wage inflation
- Costs
- Social/Cultural tensions
- A rise in low-level cultural unfamiliarity
- Downward pressure of wages
- Pressure on local schools and NHS
- Reduces
wages for
domestic
workers
- Low skilled
migrants
need training
- Increased population density and higher pollution levels