Pine Marten
Well-Known Member
I think the EU migrants send more money home that they pay in tax.
Oh come on, back that up at least. I "reckon" a whole bunch of things too but that doesn't make them true or right.
I think the EU migrants send more money home that they pay in tax.
The homeless problem doesn't actualy exist. The real problem is mental health and infrastructure
Ask a case worker for the NHS like my daughter
The financial problem does exist. Too many people living way past 3 score and 10 which was never envisaged, advanced medicine costing billions but still free which was never envisaged and too many British passport holding scum bags raping the benefits system
I am advertising a job as a trainee site assistant at the moment paying 22K starting salary. Among the responces I have had from people on the Job Seekers allowance, I offered a weeks trial to one upstanding UK citizen who never even responded and another turned down the job because he said he couldnt get from Caterham to Wallington??? that's about 5miles and 1 third of the distance I used to cycle to work.
They don't want a job they just need to comply with the rules so they can still get their benefits.
Four weeks of advertising now and still no takers.
Fortunatly my Polish subcontractors are still providing me cover and excelent work
Housing crisis? Theres millions of properties for sale just no one can afford them. The only way to solve that would be a 75% reduction in the value of properties
We can blame the imigrents we can blame the EU we can blame God for what its worth, but it is a bit like a marrage
Once the kids have left home and theres no one else to blame you have to accept its your own personal disaster.
Leaving the EU will solve nothing and create a whole new raft of problems
No doubt for which we will blame the EU screwing us on the leaving deal and not accept responsabuility for
Any one who charges into an acrimonious divorce not expecting to get screwed over, is an idiot.
Things are going to get one hell of a lot worse before they get any better.
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?I think the EU migrants send more money home that they pay in tax. The Polish chaps that came to work with us in 2004/5 reckoned their jobs back home were kept open for them to go back to while they were sending money back home. About 10 years ago I saw a figure of £2.3Bn going back to Poland per year.
The main topic of conversation among the Polish people that I have worked with, is the amount of money they have saved to take/send back. One chap working in a Dorset slaughterhouse had already bought 6 houses to do up back home, that was about 6 years ago. A chap who worked with us while his wife had 4 cleaning jobs, reckoned they saved £20,000 in the first year they were in the UK.Oh come on, back that up at least. I "reckon" a whole bunch of things too but that doesn't make them true or right.
Oh come on, back that up at least. I "reckon" a whole bunch of things too but that doesn't make them true or right.
Money sent out of the country is not being spent here creating employment for people living here.Surely, once they've earned their money and paid their taxes they are free to do with whatever is left as they please? Same as anybody else. Or are you saying that they "send it home" instead of paying taxes? Since the majority of people working in the UK, immigrant and native alike, pay their taxes through PAYE I would doubt that is the case, although as I say, I'm not sure if that is what you mean.
Doesn't answer the question of whether that's more than the tax revenue generated. Also, that's not at all specific to EU citizens and countries.
I believe its true to say that a substantial amount of this is money from people who themselves are on some form of benefits.
Surely, once they've earned their money and paid their taxes they are free to do with whatever is left as they please? Same as anybody else. Or are you saying that they "send it home" instead of paying taxes? Since the majority of people working in the UK, immigrant and native alike, pay their taxes through PAYE I would doubt that is the case, although as I say, I'm not sure if that is what you mean.
Again though, that sort of assertion really needs to be backed up.
Money sent out of the country is not being spent here creating employment for people living here.
Some will call it International Socialism, I suppose.
Some did, but others soon found they could swipe in and disappear for 12 hours doing other work before coming back to swipe out.The Poles with whom you worked worked hard for their money did they not?
. An eastern European migrant can afford to seriously undercut UK workers to the point where it is scarcely worth their working at all and still convert his remaining income so it is many times higher than theirs.
Some did, but others soon found they could swipe in and disappear for 12 hours doing other work before coming back to swipe out.
Some wanted to stay and become British, I think, but most came with the aim of sending money home.
The main topic of conversation among the Polish people that I have worked with, is the amount of money they have saved to take/send back. One chap working in a Dorset slaughterhouse had already bought 6 houses to do up back home, that was about 6 years ago. A chap who worked with us while his wife had 4 cleaning jobs, reckoned they saved £20,000 in the first year they were in the UK.
The lorry drivers shop steward had a daughter working in the local social security office. She told him that the Polish incomers had gone straight to the top of the local authority housing list.
I think there was corruption involved with the HR dept. The chap supervising the migrants, worked for the same agency that they did, so the more hours they clocked in, the more the agency earned.Well defrauding your employer like that is unpardonable wherever you're from. Dealt with a case of exactly the same thing late last year, only in this case I, the immigrant, was behaving honestly, whilst the cheat was native born. My only experience of working with Poles and Romanians has been of working with extraordinarily hard working skilled professionals. The Polish electrician I knew when I was living in Wells actually flew back to Krakow to have his hip replaced because the NHS refused to do it (they agreed he needed it, but said he was too young...). But I will freely admit that my experience of working directly with EU immigrants has been pretty narrow.