Thursday, March 27, 2008

The news there is a present and growing IT skills shortage in the UK is nothing new. Nor is the notion that the gap is plugged by skilled immigrant workers. This report from the Centre for Economics and Business Research, for recruiters Harvey Nash, just throws out more alarming statistics.

The UK will need an extra 19,000 skilled migrants by 2012 in IT, telecoms and transport.
A Harvey Nash report also found skilled migrants to the UK will top 800,000 within four years, making a contribution to the UK of £77b.

By 2010, jobs in industries that depend heavily on information and communication technology will account for half the total in Europe. The EU needs 20m skilled workers over the next 20 years.
To meet this demand, European eyes are turned overseas.

The EU last year unveiled a blue card for skilled migrants. It is a direct response to the US's green card. What some call the land of tax breaks and opportunity, the US, gets the lion's share of skilled labour (55%) compared to the EU's puny 5%.

But the blue card's political passage is far from smooth. Aimed at highly skilled migrant workers from Asian and African countries, they would get all the social and financial benefits of their newly-adopted country and their immigration there fast tracked.

But opponents say this has nothing to do with meeting the skills shortage, but is politically motivated to centralise Europe and give Brussels the say on levels of economic migrants.

Whether the blue card succeeds or fails, it's going to take a while to get the political nod. Opponents make another good point: they say skilled migrants are clever enough to know how to negotiate the immigration procedure and business is clever enough to know where to find them and tempt them over.

posted on Thursday, March 27, 2008 6:34:50 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #    Comments [0]

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 Wednesday, March 26, 2008

The name says it all, the Smooth Group helps people through the whole process of immigrating to the UK to live and work and ensure one of the most stressful experiences in life is as smooth as possible, and they can help you save up to 40 per cent on your airfare to the UK.

The Smooth Group was established recently by remuneration specialist Charterhouse Group International who have been involved with the global staffing industry since 1989 and so have great experience in the issues, trends and practices involved in many aspects of international employment. Adding visa and immigration services is a great value added to the group's core business.

The Smooth Group’s consultants are expert in navigating the confusing visa requirements and the complex immigration legislation involved in entering and settling in the UK, not least because many of them have already been through the experience themselves. Focus is on immigrants from South Africa, Australia and New Zealand.  

As UK immigration is experiencing its biggest shake up in 40 years, with the introduction of a new five tier system, the next few years are likely to be challenging at best for those wishing to immigrate to the UK  Advice covers visa advise and services, tax rebates and returns. Through Smooth Landings the company offers arrival packages in the UK including: UK Sterling bank accounts, UK national insurance registration, payroll services, accommodation assistance and UK SIM cards.

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posted on Wednesday, March 26, 2008 6:30:02 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #    Comments [0]

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