I can’t figure out what he’s blathering on about here. As much as Brexit is a heap of shit, everyone wants to make the best of it either by going back in with trade agreements or by non eu trade agreements, both of which we could have done while in the EU but it’s done now. I think he’s saying bad immigration ( as in poor working class people ) is down but good immigration ( middle class educated) is up. But there doesn’t seem to be any point made; it’s just data
I think the point is higher wages overall, due to high skill high wage immigration and low skill low wage is replaced with technological innovation and automation and less reliance on labour that goes home when shit hits the fan?
maybe. i dont think theres any guarantee of that actually happening according plan. It just feels like wishful thinking based on not alot
I work in agtech, there’s a lot of money flowing into shortening food supply chains after covid, brexit and Russia invasion.
https://www.edp24.co.uk/news/23114795.fischer-farms-boss-reveals-1bn-vertical-farming-ambitions/
This is the best summary I could come up with:
Opinion polls showed strong support among leave voters for an end to free movement and for Westminster to decide who should be allowed to enter the country for work.
The latest data shows that the four countries that secured the most work visas were India, Nigeria, Zimbabwe and the Philippines, with about half plugging gaps in the health and social care sector.
Britain’s gain, inevitably, comes at the expense of poorer countries losing some of their brightest and best workers, even if they send a chunk of the money they earn home through remittances.
Some “red wall” Conservative MPs have called for much tougher immigration controls, including raising the minimum salary required for a skilled overseas worker to £38,000.
At the same time, though, the annual fee migrants pay to use the NHS has been raised from £624 to £1,035, and Rishi Sunak is making clear his reluctance to relax immigration rules to secure a bilateral trade deal with India.
Data from Oxford University’s migration observatory shows migrants from India and sub-Saharan Africa are more likely to be employed in high-skilled jobs and command higher salaries than those from eastern Europe.
The original article contains 955 words, the summary contains 191 words. Saved 80%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!