From the tax rebates, which I literally mentioned in the exact same sentence.
Not in the post I was replying to. You only mentioned rebates after insulting me for querying your first post.
From the tax rebates, which I literally mentioned in the exact same sentence.
Not in the post I was replying to. You only mentioned rebates after insulting me for querying your first post.
You might like to explain which rebates could be cancelled to raise the billions and billions needed for investment in capital infrastructure. In any event, the biggest 'rebate' out there to the rich is surely the combination of tax credits and uncontrolled immigration allowing the rich to profit from terribly low pay.
If people are bringing additional tax income beyond what they spend, yet the services are creaking, the fact is that that money must be being spent elsewhere.
That's almost precisely what I said originally (I used the word overfunding because you used the word divert) before you accused me of diversionary tactics, sophistry and using false dichotomies!
Alternatively, your economic model is wrong and, although it takes into account tax from and welfare to European migrants, it doesn't take into account capital investment requirements and the need for these to happen unpredictably quickly, which is what lots of people mean when they talk of services 'creaking'.
I know it is, but you wanted me to specify. The fact that it happens and where it happens are not the same thing.
It is to some extent, because your criticism of the government is only meaningful if there is sufficient slack in other policy areas that can be diverted to your priority areas without causing harm or economic damage.
If this is not possible, practicable or palatable then the extra income generated from immigration is not adequate.
Additional revenue is being gained. Additional revenue is not being diverted into the NHS, but somewhere else. We leave the EU, and additional revenue is lost. Money isn't going anywhere at all now. The argument simply doesn't rely on specifying what the other thing actually is.
The UCL study revolves around the fact that these are primarily young immigrants with a low relative cost base. But because NET immigration is high we're not just recycling young immigrants every few years. We are building up a permanent population increase who will send kids to school, get sick, lose their jobs, need a pension, etc, just as the rest of us and become every bit as costly as the native population but because of the speed of the increase also precipitate a need for new roads, housing and other infrastructure. (It also presents several assumption models, one of which has no significant meet benefit at all, but only presents the highest one in its headline figures).
What you've described would be true in any case, as we physically need people to work here and pay taxes to support our aging population. Importing workers to do this is cheaper because they don't incur the the costs of schooling, but if they settle then they just contribute further to the problem, as you've described. I believe however that our population increase is not do disastrous as is made out, but could be far better managed than it is right now, as too much is left to "the market" to deal with. If you build 2000 homes then you need appropriate schools, hospitals, utilities , etc.Barn said:The UCL study revolves around the fact that these are primarily young immigrants with a low relative cost base. But because NET immigration is high we're not just recycling young immigrants every few years. We are building up a permanent population increase who will send kids to school, get sick, lose their jobs, need a pension, etc, just as the rest of us and become every bit as costly as the native population but because of the speed of the increase also precipitate a need for new roads, housing and other infrastructure. (It also presents several assumption models, one of which has no significant meet benefit at all, but only presents the highest one in its headline figures).
What you've described would be true in any case, as we physically need people to work here and pay taxes to support our aging population. Importing workers to do this is cheaper because they don't incur the the costs of schooling, but if they settle then they just contribute further to the problem, as you've described. I believe however that our population increase is not do disastrous as is made out, but could be far better managed than it is right now, as too much is left to "the market" to deal with. If you build 2000 homes then you need appropriate schools, hospitals, utilities , etc.
So it's very important that we continue to send old British people to live in Spain, right?
It's up to Spain how they feel about that.
Clearly it does matter, because if there is no realistic ability to "undivert" sufficient funding from whichever mystery location it's actually going then the underlying problem is insufficient income for the current cost base, not poor "diversion policy".
That money would not be there if we Brexited, though. Your proposed alternative does not solve the problem for these apparently vital services, and is why you keep missing the point about what it actually is.
That's why your argument is sophistry - it is focussing on something that is irrelevant.
"We" are not exporting anybody. Spain has chosen to permit freedom of movement. The Spanish people can choose whether they support that or not.
The WW3 comment was grossly irresponsible spin by Boris. What DC actually said was that it would impact upon our alliances.
--- old post above --- --- new post below ---
Luxembourgish is not one of the business languages of Luxembourg. Nobody is expected to learn it upon arrival.
--- old post above --- --- new post below ---
But people losing jobs is all fine and dandy?
--- old post above --- --- new post below ---
So you want to leave the EU to somehow improve pay and conditions under a Tory government?
just like we have chosen to permit freedom of movement!
So freedom of movement is fine for decently affluent British people but not for dirty eastern europeans?
Pay and conditions have improved substantially since I entered the job market in the late '80s, a guaranteed minimum wage being just one example.
And yet, the unemployment rate in 1989 was slightly lower than it was in 2013 (it has improved recently since then).
So, with poor wages and conditions, just as many people were out of work than with improved wages and conditions.
Brexiters want to make it difficult for us to live, work or retire in countries with better public services or better weather than the UK. They don't care if they are ruining people's dreams, forcing people to endure a lifetime in the UK.
Nobody is forcing anybody to do anything.
So Paul from Grimsby won't work picking vegetables or stacking shelves for minimum wage, but Pawel from Gdansk will.If there are jobs available but people are not taking them there is normally a reason. All economic migrants are doing is supressing wages.
Nobody is forcing anybody to do anything.
All economic migrants are doing is supressing wages.
"I have no problem with people who want to come here and work and pay taxes, but we need to leave the EU anyway because of immigration[/B]".