Immigration UK

MORE REVELATIONS ON MIGRANTS HEADING TO THE UK AND ELSEWHERE ONCE JAN 1ST IMMIGRATION CONTROLS ARE LIFTED……..

 

The claim is, you need more people to fill the expanding workforce, while it’s amazingly clear that the expansion of people living on the dole is not going away (presently at 7.6% and governments always fudge the numbers), and the average taxpayer is being sucked dry to pay for it all. You simply do not have sovereignty if you can’t control your own borders.

Exposed: What they DIDN’T tell you about new wave of migrants heading for booming Britain

  • Bulgarians and Romanians will have the same rights as other EU citizens to live and work throughout Europe, but Britain is likely to be seen as more attractive than other countries struggling to make an economic comeback
  • The Home Office-funded review – obtained by The Mail on Sunday – also suggests that the UK could lose out financially if low-paid Bulgarians and Romanians drive out Poles on higher wages, who pay more tax
  • Worryingly, the report also raises the prospect of tensions between Bulgarians and Romanians on one side and the first wave of Eastern European immigrants on the other
  • Scroll down to read the full report

By JONATHAN PETRE and SIMON WALTERS

PUBLISHED: 22:11 GMT, 28 December 2013 | UPDATED: 22:11 GMT, 28 December 2013

Bulgarians and Romanians will flock to Britain in far greater numbers than forecast as our economy races ahead of the rest of Europe, a secret report predicts.

After immigration controls are lifted this week, Britons could find their jobs are squeezed in some areas – while community tensions could rise as the new wave of migrants fight for work with other Eastern Europeans who have been settled in Britain for a decade, it suggests.

The Home Office-funded review – obtained by The Mail on Sunday – also suggests that the UK could lose out financially if low-paid Bulgarians and Romanians drive out Poles on higher wages, who pay more tax.

From Wednesday, Bulgarians and Romanians, known as A2 migrants, will have the same rights as other EU citizens to live and work throughout Europe, but Britain is likely to be seen as more attractive than other countries struggling to make an economic comeback.

Bulgarians

The authoritative report by University of Reading academics was  commissioned ahead of the change by a group of 74 councils in the South East of England, working with the UK Border Agency, police and health services, but has not been officially publicised.

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