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Brexit, Migration, and Mobility Brexit, Migration, and Mobility

Brexit, Migration, and Mobility - PowerPoint Presentation

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Brexit, Migration, and Mobility - PPT Presentation

James Hampshire Senior Lecturer in Politics University of Sussex 8 March 2016 Britain in Europe Not in Schengen border controls Optin to JHA measures join EU migration policy on a casebycase basis ID: 513493

free immigration migration attitudes immigration free attitudes migration public britain movement identity migrants source british important negative economic cultural

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Slide1

Brexit, Migration, and Mobility

James Hampshire

Senior Lecturer in Politics

University

of Sussex

8 March 2016Slide2

Britain in Europe

Not in Schengen

= border controls

Opt-in to JHA measures= join EU migration policy on a case-by-case basisAs part of EU single market= free movement The difference the deal makes?In-work benefit; child benefitUnlikely to reduce migration(Child benefit change may even incentivise whole family movement)Slide3

Public opinion on immigration

Public attitudes on immigration in general are:

Negative

: approximately ¾ of people in Britain favour reducing immigration. Salient: immigration is consistenly one of the top two most important issues Public attitudes to EU free movement are negative:51% of the British public want to end the free movement of people in the EU59% want to stop EU migrants from accessing the NHS for free

68%

favour

reducing EU migrants’ access to welfare benefits

47% think the EU is ‘undermining Britain’s distinctive identity’

Source: British Social Attitudes,

Curtice

,

How Deeply does Britain’s Euroscepticism Run?

2015Slide4
Slide5

Source: Transatlantic Trends Immigration 2014Slide6

Net migration by nationality, 1991-2015Slide7

Immigration by nationality, 2014Slide8

Socio-demographic characteristics of A8 and A2 migrants

A8 migrants to the UK are:

y

oung: 53% <30, 85% <40 (Labour Force Survey)more highly educated than the British populationhigh levels of employment (Drinkwater et al., 2009)mobile: high levels of return and circulation (Pollard et al. 2008)highly responsive to

labour

market conditions, more so than previous settlement migration

disproportionately likely to be employed in low-skill, low-wage sectors e.g. elementary trades or servicesSlide9

The Polski

Sklep

effect, orIs it the economy, stupid?Are we barking up the wrong tree?Is this a matter of material interests or something else? Perceptions and identity?Analysis of public attitudes on immigration in general find that:identity is more important than interests as a determinant of anti-immigrant attitudes (Sides and Citrin 2007,

Ivarsflaten

2005);

to the extent that economic factors are important, it is more socio-tropic concerns about the overall economy, rather than egocentric concerns about an individual’s own economic standing that influence attitudes.

Information is very important: publics overestimate the number of migrants by wide margins, which hardens attitudes

Is opposition as much about the perceived threat of social and cultural change as economic impacts? Slide10

Source: Transatlantic Trends Immigration 2014Slide11
Slide12

Culture and economics

Many Britons perceive the EU as a cultural threat:

40% think the EU is ‘undermining Britain's cultural identity’

Briton’s also have a weak sense of European identity (only 16%)But they are unpersuaded that leaving makes economic senseImpact on Britain's economy if Britain leaves the EU:Positive 24%, negative 40%Among those who think positive 72% support leaving, among those who think negative just 6% support leaveConcern about identity is the strongest predictor of ‘leave’Source: British Social Attitudes,

Curtice

,

How Deeply does Britain’s Euroscepticism Run?

2015Slide13

Migration after a Brexit

Outside the EU, but in the EEA = continued free movement for EU citizens.

Very unlikely free trade without free movement

Outside EU and EEA = no free movementEU citizens treated as other immigrants (NB EU15, A8 and A2)UK would have to loosen immigration policy (Tiers 1-3) or accept reduced skilled immigration levels in potentially damaging ways (expect strong lobbying by business)And what about the 1.2 million Brits in the EU? Bilateral negotiations would have to take place on their residency rights.How would EU member states respond?