65.3% of Bulgarian Workers Earn Below Subsistence Level
According to recent data from the Confederation of Independent Trade Unions of Bulgaria (CITUB), the financial strain on Bulgarian households continues to intensify
A huge majority of Britons want the UK government to extend restrictions on Bulgarian and Romanian migrants, a Daily Mail survey, described by the media as “explosive”, shows.
On 1 January 2014, Bulgarians and Romanians will be able to work anywhere in the European Union as the last of their membership restrictions are lifted.
A total of 82% of respondents said no to a new influx from Bulgaria and Romania, according to the poll.
They said that – even if it meant legal sanctions – the Prime Minister should keep the restrictions in place to ‘serve the national interest’. And 80% of voters say Westminster should retain the final say over who enters the country.
Only 5% think Brussels should be in charge.
An overwhelming 85% said migration was putting too much pressure on schools, hospitals and housing.
Earlier this week UKIP leader Nigel Farage has slammed as “utterly pathetic” the government's claim that it is not legally possible to block east European migrants working in Britain from the New Year.
“It is utterly pathetic that Britain’s Immigration Minister has such little control over who can and can’t enter the UK,“ Farage fumed.
“Mark Harper must frankly be embarrassed at the impotence of his own role in government. As he himself points out, under EU Treaty obligations Britain can’t remain in the EU and say no to open borders with Romania and Bulgaria next year.
“That isn’t what the British public want to hear and it isn’t good enough.”
The condemnation came in response to a statemnt by UK Immigration Minister Mark Harper, who said there will be no mass migration of Bulgarians and Romanians, coming to the UK for work in the new year when labour market restrictions are lifted.
In the first official assessment of the likely flow of Romanians and Bulgarians to Britain when the curbs are removed on 1 January, the minister, Mark Harper, said the situation this time would not replicate the mass arrival of Poles to the UK 10 years ago.
“There is a big difference with 2004 when we were the only major country not to have transitional controls and all the other big countries did.
“Anybody who wanted to work here legally came to the UK,” he told a Home Office press briefing:
He suggested that Bulgarians and Romanians were more likely to go to Germany, Italy and Spain than Britain.
Harper also criticised Tory rightwingers who have been demanding that the seven-year "transitional controls" on Romanians and Bulgarians be extended after January.
"It is simply not legally possible."
He called it "a fool's errand" to try to predict the numbers that would go to the UK.
The former home secretary Jack Straw had said last week, he added, that a "spectacular mistake" was made in 2004 when academic estimates suggested that only 15,000 Polish and other east European migrants at that time would go to Britain.
He said there were now eight other countries also removing their controls.
"We are therefore not in the same position as previously, when we were the only country that was an option for those wishing to migrate. There are now a range of other European countries in the eurozone, including Germany, which is an economic powerhouse that is generating jobs and creating economic growth."
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