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Employment lawLatest NewsEconomics, government & businessRecruitment & retentionSkills shortages

Conservative Party Conference: Migrant workforce pledge from Tories

by Personnel Today 7 Oct 2009
by Personnel Today 7 Oct 2009

The Conservatives would launch a drive to push for more highly qualified migrants to come to the UK, if they come to power.

Speaking at a Tory conference fringe meeting in Manchester, Shadow minister Damian Green said the party would keep the government’s points-based migration system, but place an overall annual limit on numbers.

It would also cut low-skilled migration.

According to a BBC report, Green said he wanted to achieve an immigration system as close as possible to the Australian system, which as well as having quotas for some professions also set targets for highly qualified migration.

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He said Britain was a global trading nation, and it was vital for future prosperity to attract more entrepreneurs and highly qualified graduates to the UK, rather than seeing them go to rival economies such as Japan or the US.

But he also added it was important to control immigration by imposing an overall cap on numbers to ease pressure on public services and social tensions.

Coverage of Cameron’s speech on Thursday

Personnel Today will be covering David Cameron’s speech to the conference live on Thursday at 2pm, with the help of three leading employment panelists from the EEF, the Work Foundation and the Institute of Employment Studies. Make sure you log on to Personneltoday.com on Thursday to see the latest employment news being reported as it happens, with expert commentary on what this means for HR professionals.

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