Dear Netters, 
Another short, sweet letter on immigration –generated economy the Independence
presented this morning (4 July 2011) which is reproduced below:
bhuban
 
MIGRANTS CAN PUT THE GREAT BACK IN BRITAIN                        Sean O’Grady
 
Maybe, like the war on drugs, the best thing that can be in the ”battle for our 
borders”
is to surrender and make the best of it.
For a start there is little that any government can do to prevent workers from 
eastern Europe to work anyway, and they are bulk of the total. A true 
“immigration cap” would be illegal under EU treaties. Poles, Lithunians and 
Slovaks and others have a right to fix our plumbing and serve us coffee , or 
“swamp us” as it is usually termed. Romanians and Bulgarians can’t so that 
particular “flood” has been stemmed.
That may not last. The EU obliges Britain, by 31st December of this year to 
demonstrate that lifting current labour market access to citizens from Bulgaria 
and Romania threatens a “serious disturbance of its labour market”. Why, say, 
10,000 building workers from the Czech republic are less “disturbing” tha n 
10,000 turning up from the Balkans is not clear. If things go as badly as some 
think in the euro-zone, the UK may once again be attractive to a new generation 
of migrants from the distressed economies of Portugal, Spain, Greece and 
Ireland. Some cap.
With a name like mine you will forgive me for believing that their loss will be 
Britain’s gain. Let me offer you a bigger vision than the “Big Society” – the 
“Big Economy”: for Britain to be a regional economic superpower and overtake 
Germany. We would then be guaranteed a place at the top table, to afford the 
social services and pensions we deserve, and all the rest. 
To be a productive and prosperous nation we need people, lots of them, and the 
younger and better skilled the better: Immigrants tend to be young and 
enterprising. They work harder, often; think of the thousands toiling, yes, 
often illegally, in sweat shops, cleaning hotels and hospitals, serving behind 
bars or waiting on tables, driving mini cabs at all hours and working in care 
homes tending to our parents and grandparents. Their children often go to the 
professions or start their own businesses – like the Kenyan and Ugandan Asians 
I grew up with in Leicester.
You might despise an overwhelmingly immigrant workforce, but you can hardly 
call them bone idle. There are a few groups, Bangladeshi women, for example, 
where cultural factors do lead to low participation in the workforce. But they 
are not the rule. And if migrants do abuse the benefits system we should pursue 
them. A fraud is a fraud. Ending immigration has never eliminated that 
particular branch of human ingenuity.
Think of the most vibrant economies in history:America, Argentina and Britain 
in the 19th century: western Europe and Japan in the 1960s; China, Brazil, 
Indonesia and India today. All had rapidly expanding, youthful populations, 
some of them by attracting immigrants. Contrast them with the sclerotic, ageing 
economies of today – southern Europe and Japan.
When people object that Britain is “overcrowded” the are right-in  one sense. 
Housing is scarce, and expensive. That, though, means we have too few houses, 
not too many immigrants. You do not have to travel in the UK very far to 
encounter green fields, ripe for development. Our commuter trains and roads are 
appallingly congested; so let’s build some more.
As James Dyson tells us today, let our immigrants also do groundbreaking 
research in universities. Let them, as they do now, run Lloyds Banking Group, 
captain the England cricket team and marry the Queen. High immigration means 
we  can again afford aircraft carriers with planes on them, and free nursing 
care, homes and higher education for all. We would have lost the battle for our 
borders; but won the economic war

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