Deutsch Wolf
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- Joined
- Oct 16, 2009
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Yes. I'm not sure why that would be a problem?
Yes. I'm not sure why that would be a problem?
Immigrants improve living standards, as they contribute more than they take.
Regardless of Schengen the UK government cannot ignore the base tenet of the EU freedom of movement. It cannot stop people within the EU who hold passports from living and working in another EU country. You cannot blame immigrants but you can question successive governments on population control.
The higher the population the greater demand on public services. If tax revenues cannot meet what it costs to provide public services then they borrow. Successive governments have borrowed , the national debt is obscenely high and we pay £60Bn a year interest on these repayments.
How do we effectively cost public services given the percentage population rise 2000-2020 is expected to be double that of the previous twenty years?
Regardless of Schengen the UK government cannot ignore the base tenet of the EU freedom of movement. It cannot stop people within the EU who hold passports from living and working in another EU country. You cannot blame immigrants but you can question successive governments on population control.
The higher the population the greater demand on public services. If tax revenues cannot meet what it costs to provide public services then they borrow. Successive governments have borrowed , the national debt is obscenely high and we pay £60Bn a year interest on these repayments.
How do we effectively cost public services given the percentage population rise 2000-2020 is expected to be double that of the previous twenty years?
The way you pay for the services used by an immigrant is the same way you pay for the ones used by a native - tax. Its not difficult to grasp.
We've been here before with national debt; if you subscribe to the view that running an economy is like running a household or a corner shop, then yes, it is obscenely high. If studied in the context of actual history and economic theory, then no it isn't.
Governments don't run surpluses. It's economic illiteracy.
We've been here before with national debt; if you subscribe to the view that running an economy is like running a household or a corner shop, then yes, it is obscenely high. If studied in the context of actual history and economic theory, then no it isn't.
Governments don't run surpluses. It's economic illiteracy.
Perhaps because the people in charge of investing that money don't believe in the value of public services and haven't invested it with a view to their continued existence...
I'm hopeful following Brexit that we put our money back into the economy by using British suppliers and that we increase the flow of money from overseas who want to buy our services and products. Capitalism means that for very winner you'll get a loser which results in protectionism.
Yet protectionism is exactly what you advocate in your first sentence. It is folly to think that because we are out of Europe we will start to buy British. Mainly because, for the most part, Britain does't make the desired products at a reasonable cost base.
It is barmy to think that leaving the EU would make people by British, the type of political nonsense that Farage would come out with.
What percentage of EU nationals make up the UK population?6 to 9% of EU nationals in the UK are born outside the EU.
Any idea where this figure has come from?