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1 m poles flocking to Britain

16.08.05, 16:19
Nearly a million Poles have come to Britain since EU enlargement last
year,official figures show.The number soared to 994,000 in the year to june
compared to 326,ooo in the previous 12 months.
Many East Europeans visiting the UK are tourists. But around one in eight
Polish citizens- 120,000- plan to stay more then then three month for work or
studying. Many find jobs on building sites and farms in hotels, restaurants
and bars, or as au pairs. Ministers say the influx boosts the economy.
Obserwuj wątek
    • starywiarus Głosowanie nogami n/t 16.08.05, 16:22
    • ontarian Re: 1 m poles flocking to Britain 16.08.05, 16:29
      a74-7 napisał:

      > and bars, or as au pairs. Ministers say the influx boosts the economy.
      tak, ale brytyjska ekonomie, nie polanezyjska
      • starywiarus Re: 1 m poles flocking to Britain 16.08.05, 16:41
        ontarian napisał:

        > a74-7 napisał:
        >
        > > and bars, or as au pairs. Ministers say the influx boosts the economy.
        > tak, ale brytyjska ekonomie, nie polanezyjska

        No i o to chodzi. Polanezję należy uczyć europejskich manier uderzając tam, gdzie boli, czyli po
        kieszeni. See also www.panorama.australink.pl/panorama/artykuly/marcin.php
        • nadau Re: 1 m poles flocking to Britain 18.08.05, 21:57
          Kopoli równiez należy uczyć doberych manier uderzając tam, gdzie najbardziej ich
          boli, czyli po kieszeni.
          Ceny polskich paszportów w Aborygenii mają jeszcze w tym roku zdrożeć.
          He,he
        • soup.nazi Re: 1 m poles flocking to Britain 19.08.05, 04:03
          starywiarus napisał:

          See also <a
          href="www.panorama.australink.pl/panorama/artykuly/marcin.php"
          target="_blank">www.panorama.australink.pl/panorama/artykuly/marcin.php</a>

          Zeby bylo smieszniej i straszniej (w Polanezji) nad podobnym procesem dla
          lekarzy jak opisany w artykule, z podobnych powodow, pracuje Kanada. Kanada nie
          ma cieplych morz i palm, ale za to ma duzo blizej do Polanezji, nieco lepszy
          przelicznik dolara na polanezyjskie tugriki, oraz duze okno z widokiem na
          Stany, hehehe.
          • worcester Re: 1 m poles flocking to Britain 19.08.05, 04:23
            bo wszyscy spie..aja przez to okno i nie ma kto tu leczyc
    • worcester chyba klamiesz 16.08.05, 18:18
      cytowany przez wiarusa FT napisal zupelnie co innego:
      Instead the British government says that 176,000 workers from the new member
      states registered in Britain during the first 11 months of expansion, of whom
      about 100,000 were Poles.

      I co ciekawsze:
      Many stayed only for a short period and, in a surprise to British officials, 27
      per cent took jobs in management and administration.


      news.ft.com/cms/s/3e89fa40-0e0e-11da-aa67-00000e2511c8.html


      Chyba nie bedziesz podwazal takiego zrodla jak FT?
      • jeet-yet deputy Polish labour minister Jacek Mecina said: 19.08.05, 12:54
        worcester, chyba nie bedziesz podwazal takiego zrodla jak deputy Polish labour
        minister Jacek Mecina?

        > cytowany przez wiarusa FT napisal zupelnie co innego:
        > Instead the British government says that 176,000 workers from the new member
        > states registered in Britain during the first 11 months of expansion, of whom
        > about 100,000 were Poles.
        >
        > I co ciekawsze:
        > Many stayed only for a short period and, in a surprise to British officials,
        27
        > per cent took jobs in management and administration.
        >
        >
        > news.ft.com/cms/s/3e89fa40-0e0e-11da-aa67-00000e2511c8.html
        >
        >
        > Chyba nie bedziesz podwazal takiego zrodla jak FT?

        EUbusiness - Half million Poles to take summer jobs in other EU countries

        21/06/2005

        Around 500,000 Polish workers will take seasonal jobs in other European Union
        member states this summer, mainly in Britain and Germany, deputy Polish labour
        minister Jacek Mecina said Tuesday.
        Most will work in catering, construction or farming, Mecina was cited by
        Poland's PAP news agency as saying.
        Last year around 300,000 Poles took seasonal jobs in Germany and 100,000 in
        Britain, he said.
        When the EU expanded by 10 members on May 1 last year, most older EU member
        states opted to keep their job markets closed to workers from the new members
        including Poland, during a transition period of at least two years, extendable
        to five or seven years.
        The only exceptions were Britain, Ireland and Sweden.
        Seasonal workers from new EU member states are allowed into Germany, Italy, the
        Netherlands and Spain on a quota basis.
      • jeet-yet Re: chyba klamiesz, worcester 19.08.05, 13:00
        worcester napisała:

        > cytowany przez wiarusa FT napisal zupelnie co innego:
        > Instead the British government says that 176,000 workers from the new member
        > states registered in Britain during the first 11 months of expansion, of whom
        > about 100,000 were Poles.
        >
        > I co ciekawsze:
        > Many stayed only for a short period and, in a surprise to British officials,
        27
        > per cent took jobs in management and administration.
        >
        >
        > news.ft.com/cms/s/3e89fa40-0e0e-11da-aa67-00000e2511c8.html
        >
        >
        > Chyba nie bedziesz podwazal takiego zrodla jak FT?

        --

        EU's newest workers keep beating at west's door

        By Christopher Condonin Budapest and Jan Cienski in Warsaw
        Published: August 16 2005 03:00 | Last updated: August 16 2005 03:00

        New European Union nations are pushing hard to get older members to drop labour
        restrictions, hoping that several west European countries will abandon existing
        barriers next May, two years after enlargement.


        Polish and Hungarian government officials concede it will be almost impossible
        to persuade Germany and Austria to remove their restrictions. However, they
        said other EU countries, where the labour migration issue is less sensitive
        politically, might be persuaded to open their markets fully by next year.

        Twelve EU countries now bar citizens from eight central European countries that
        joined the EU in 2004 from taking jobs without a work permit. Only the UK,
        Ireland and Sweden granted all 10 new members, which include Malta and Cyprus,
        full access to their labour markets.

        Governments may lift the barriers next May or renew restrictions for another
        three years.

        The curbs were allowed under accession treaties penned with each of the new
        members from central Europe, where wages are considerably lower than in western
        Europe. They can last from two to seven years, with reviews at two and five
        years.

        Most of the new member states expected only nearby Germany and Austria to
        impose restrictions. But just before enlargement, amid warnings from anti-
        immigration groups of a flood of cheap labour from the east, 12 governments
        invoked restrictions. The moves caused surprise and anger in the new EU
        capitals, where governments have since argued that the barriers distort the
        EU's internal market and deny central Europeans one of the Union's four
        fundamental liberties: free movement of people, goods, capital and services.

        This autumn the European Commission will form a high-level working group to
        study the impact of the barriers. Ahead of that, countries such as Poland and
        Hungary have been lobbying hard.

        The central Europeans have firm support from Vladimir Spidla, European
        commissioner for employment, social affairs and equal opportunity, himself a
        Czech. "The commissioner's opinion is that the restrictions should be removed
        as soon as possible," said Katharina von Schnurbein, Mr Spidla's spokeswoman.

        The commission cannot force governments to lift the barriers next May.

        In persuading fearful EU countries to drop the restrictions, Mr Spidla and the
        new members will probably point to Britain's successful experience. Before
        enlargement the British press was filled with scare stories of hundreds of
        thousands of desperate easterners readying to steal jobs and take advantage of
        British benefits.

        Instead the British government says that 176,000 workers from the new member
        states registered in Britain during the first 11 months of expansion, of whom
        about 100,000 were Poles. Many stayed only for a short period and, in a
        surprise to British officials, 27 per cent took jobs in management and
        administration.

        The government estimates that these labour migrants contributed about £500m to
        the British economy last year. With an average of 600,000 job vacancies, the
        doors are still wide open.

        British employers are now combing the region looking for doctors, dentists, bus
        drivers, nurses and other highly trained workers.
    • waldek.usa Deja vu 18.08.05, 20:45
      a74-7 napisał:

      > Nearly a million Poles have come to Britain since EU enlargement last
      > year,official figures show.The number soared to 994,000 in the year to june
      > compared to 326,ooo in the previous 12 months.
      > Many East Europeans visiting the UK are tourists.

      ► Podobnie dzialo sie po zjednoczeniu Miemiec. Wschodniachy rwaly do West
      Berlin, aby zobaczyc kawalek Zachodu i zrobic symboliczne zakupy za walute
      otrzymana w prezencie od zachodniachow.

      But around one in eight
      > Polish citizens- 120,000- plan to stay more then then three month for work or
      > studying. Many find jobs on building sites and farms in hotels, restaurants
      > and bars, or as au pairs. Ministers say the influx boosts the economy.

      ► but of course.
    • blotniarka.stawowa Za to w Austrii... 19.08.05, 04:27
      wiadomosci.gazeta.pl/wiadomosci/1,53600,2874415.html
      • soup.nazi Re: Za to w Austrii... 19.08.05, 05:52
        A mnie sie to podoba:

        "W odpowiedzi na decyzję większości starych państw UE Polska zdecydowała się na
        symboliczny gest: Niemcy, Austriacy i obywatele innych państw Unii utrzymujących
        okres przejściowy muszą starać się u nas o pozwolenie na pracę. A to bywa
        uciążliwe. Brytyjczycy, Irlandczycy i Szwedzi takiego obowiązku już nie mają."

        Boso, ale w ostrogach. Ruch czysto symboliczny, ale nalezalo go wykonac.
        • luiza-w-ogrodzie Re: Za to w Austrii... 19.08.05, 06:02
          Mnie zaciekawilo co innego:
          "Brytyjscy specjaliści podkreślają, że Polacy, Czesi, Węgrzy itp. podejmują
          takie prace, którymi rdzenni wyspiarze nie są zainteresowani"

          Pozdrawiam
          Luiza-w-Ogrodzie

          ><crying(((º>`·.¸¸.·´¯`·.¸¸><crying(((º>
          .·´¯`·.. ><crying(((º>`·.¸¸.·´¯`·.¸¸><crying(((º>

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