Does Mr O'Byrnes believe that we should just sack the foreign nationals who hold the jobs in hotels, restaurants, corner shops etc and employ Irish people in those same jobs to solve the jobs crisis?
A major point in the article, which I agree with, is that the government is spending money (reducing its tax take via VAT reduction, levying private pension funds etc.) to create jobs - and there is no point doing that if the jobs will not be taken up by people currently on benefits - the scheme may just attract more immigrants if they are the only ones willing to do the jobs. So we'll still have the same people on the dole but there will have been a cost to the state.Also I am not sure why foreign nationals were brought into the article. They live here and they have jobs so what's the point?
If I lost my job tomorrow, I wouldn't grab the first opportunity in gardening that came along. I would spend time trying to find a job in the area that I am qualified in. Fair enough, I shouldn't be given an unlimited amount of time to do it but I should be given an opportunity without being punished. It doesn't make me work shy
A major point in the article, which I agree with, is that the government is spending money (reducing its tax take via VAT reduction, levying private pension funds etc.) to create jobs - and there is no point doing that if the jobs will not be taken up by people currently on benefits - the scheme may just attract more immigrants if they are the only ones willing to do the jobs. So we'll still have the same people on the dole but there will have been a cost to the state.
No - but a lot will rely on anecdotal evidence from friends/family already here. If the message is 'you'll find a job no problem' vs. 'not so easy to get a job anymore', that will have an impact on the numbers coming here.I somehow doubt immigrants are sitting in some foreign Country looking at the latest vacancies in Supermacs saying we must go there.
Why?
If there's a gardening job available in the interim, you should be compelled to take it.
If Irish people take all the jobs, we will just have a load of unemployed foreign national workers.
Correct, they are not free and they are paid for through taxation. I never mentioned the word 'free' in my post, so I'm not sure why you bring this up as a retort to my post?First of all, none of the things you mention are free in the UK, people pay for them through taxation and they pay heavily for them.
That's not the point I've been making. I've mentioned on numerous threads that there is no point in just looking at welfare rates while not taking the 'big picture' into account. Cost of living is just one feature of that 'big picture' - overall supports available from the State such as NHS and education is another part of that 'big picture'.Secondly, you have mentioned on numerous threads that there is no point in just looking at welfare rates while not taking cost of living into account, when comparing welfare entitlements in the UK and Ireland, and you are absolutely right. But I have pointed out on numerous occasions that JSA alone is 250% higher in Ireland than in the UK, and that at no stretch of the imagination is the cost of living 250% in Ireland than in the UK.
This is the point. You take something on a short term basis until you can get something better again. It's not like it's for an eternity. It's interesting to see that the 'usual' suspects against reducing benefits are those in the 'safest' of jobs. I can't help wonder why? Is it because they fear that they share the same employer and their own pay might suddenly seem so high?
The difference being that we can refuse entry/permits to the 2,926 Brazilian workers (for example) that were issued PPSNs in the first 6 months of this year.
Surely it's people in the not-so-safe jobs who are more in favour of retaining the current benefit system.
But you can't limit the amount of Europeans. So we refuse entry to 2,926 Brazillians. Are you saying those 2,926 jobs should go to Irish people on the dole rather than Polish immigrants for example?
You are moving the discussion onto immigration policy.
Whatever way you look at it, we shouldn't really be issuing work permits to non-Europeans so that they take up jobs that people in the EU can do just as well.
Suppose there are 100 jobs available and there are 300 applicants, 100 from Ireland, 100 from EU, & 100 from outside the EU. You'd be mad to employ the people from outside the EU because then you have to pay social welfare to the other 200. At least you can send the 100 from outside the EU home.
Where do you think all our junior doctors come from? Permits are not just issued to anyone. They are demand driven.
I'm not talking about high-skill level jobs like doctors. I'm talking about lower level jobs.
Are you claiming that there isn't one Irish person who could do even one of the jobs of the 2,926 Brazilians mentioned in the article?
I have no idea. I don't know what they do. I do know that your local fast food restaurant can't provide a work permit to a non-european for flipping burgers.
things like child benefit should be targeted rather than universal
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