London, Saturday, March 29, 2008
Migration
has
brought 'zero' economic benefit [to
Britain]
By Philip Johnston and
Robert Winnett
TEN years of record
immigration to Britain has [sic]
produced virtually no economic benefits for the
country, a parliamentary inquiry has found. A
House of Lords committee, which is due to report
next Tuesday, will call into question Government
claims that foreign workers add £6 billion
each year to the wealth of the
nation.
It
David
Irving comments: |
So it turns out that
the Government statisticians forgot to
add the costs of extra policing, and
the millions of pounds required for
translation and interpreting
services. Over half the
crime in Cambridgeshire is now
committed by immigrants. And will
somebody explain how the Romanian
gypsies harassing pedestrians in Sloane
Street every day are benefiting our
economy? They cannot even be arrested
and thrown out - they all have
carefully-produced EU badges
identifying their inviolate status:
while I meanwhile am not permitted to
travel to Germany, Austria and other
countries to visit archives,
publishers, and human sources of
history. Note that the
cowardly Daily Telegraph
carefully omits the "i" word in its
headline, immigrants: they
maintain the fiction that these are
just migrants, as though they
are arriving like tourists and shortly
moving on, waving their hats and
beaming those water-melon smiles we saw
in the Pathé newsreels of the
1950s. Uh, no. They have come to suck
Britain dry, like any other
immigrants. If only those
gangplank shots could be reversed now:
if only we could just press a knob, and
film the whole shuffling mob of cheap
slave-labour immigrants stepping
backwards up into the bowels of the
ships they were transported over here
in. These weird editors
have a lot to answer for. I remember
that in the 1960s and 1970s the
Daily Telegraph house style book
ordered their writers to use only the
word plastics, not
plastic, as in "a plastics
folder." In 1967 that same
house style book defined that David
Irving was in future to be referred
to only as the writer, and not
the historian. I can live with that,
but can we native British now live with
the mass multi-million immigration that
Mr Sanctimonious Blair and his
cronies, funded as it now turns out by
You Know Whom, have inflicted on
us?
Front
page of Pi, University College London
newspaper, Feb 2, 1961: Click for
full-scale image It rings hollow
now, but as early as January 1961,
speaking alongside Sir Oswald
Mosley at a University College
London debate on the motion "This House
would maintain the unrestricted right
of Commonwealth citizens to enter this
country," I warned of the increased
Tuberculosis level that would result as
just one of the side-effects (I did not
even mention the guns and
narcotics). |
is expected to say this must be balanced against
the increase in population and their use of
local services such as health and education,
resulting in little benefit per head of the
population.
"OUR overall conclusion is that the economic
benefits of net immigration to the resident
population are small and close to zero in the
long run," the report will say.
The findings of the Lords economics committee
threaten to demolish the key argument made by
ministers to justify the highest levels of
immigration in the country's history.
The inquiry by the committee, which includes
two former chancellors and several former
Cabinet ministers, is the first to try to
balance the costs and benefits of large-scale
immigration.
The population is increasing by more than
190,000 every year, largely as a result of
immigration.
Foreign workers now make up 12.5 per cent of
the labour force, compared with 7.4 per cent a
decade ago. Critics say Labour lost control of
the borders, issued too many work permits and
should not have opened up the labour market to
eastern Europe.
However, ministers say that without
large-scale immigration there would have been
slower economic growth.
A Whitehall paper produced for the committee
said average output growth over the past five
years was 2.7 per cent a year and migration
contributed an estimated 15 to 20 per cent of
this. The Government said this indicated a
contribution of £6 billion - or
£700,000 a day- from foreign workers.
However, the committee's final report is
expected to say the Government should have
focused on the impact of immigration on GDP per
head, not the economy as a whole.
David Coleman, a professor of
demography at Oxford University, said in his
evidence to the committee that the Government
had excluded costs from crime, security, the
race relations process, health "tourism" and
imported ailments such as
TB.
Richard Pearson, a visiting professor
at the University of Sussex's Centre for
Migration Research, said: "While migrants have
clearly helped alleviate often long-standing
skill shortages, they have also filled many
low-skilled jobs, often at very low wages.
"These migrants are likely to be displacing,
and reducing the incentive on employers to
recruit and train low-skilled, indigenous
workers.''
How those Lefty
students howled then! Now here we have
it confirmed in this report. RIGHT wingers in Britain have been
warning of this calamity since the
1950s and have been decried as racists,
and even imprisoned for saying it. It
has little or nothing to do with race.
It is about Englishness. On
the second day of the Lipstadt Trial,
January 12, 2000, I said: Like
most fellow countrymen of my
background and vintage, I regret the
passing of the Old England. I sometimes think,
my Lord, that if the soldiers and
sailors who stormed the beaches of
Normandy in 1944 could see what
England would be like at the end of
this century, they would not have
got 50 yards up the beach. I think
they would have given up in
disgust. When Lipstadt's
craven, bootlicking counsel asked me
in
court a few days later what I meant by
patriotism, I replied: "Patriotism is
literally respecting the country that
has been handed to you by your
[fore-]fathers, by your
parents." (Day 15, Feb 3, 2000) He pressed the
matter. I now said, [As]
somebody born in England of 1938,
with all the values that I grew up
in -- grew to respect and admire and
love -- I regret what has happened
to our country now. Sometimes I wish
I could go Heathrow Airport and get
on a 747 and take a ten-hour flight
and land back in England as it was,
as it used to be. He gave up, but
the cowardly press did not, because it
was precisely what the British wanted
to hear said, and what the journaille
was frightened of saying themselves: my
words about the Normandy beaches
appeared as Quote of the Week in almost
every national newspaper, and as Quote
of the Month in three if not more
Sunday papers. Head for Heathrow!
Since the Barbadians all appear now to
be over here, let's all go there. A Leftie wrote me a
mocking letter, saying had I not
realised that the newspapers were
making fun of my remarks. Uh, no again;
they were not. |