SWP's back
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- Joined
- 29 Jun 2009
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- 90,600
Edited.We might lose the value of the £1.
Edited.We might lose the value of the £1.
The country isn’t full , parts are overcrowded mainly the south east other parts are crying out for people to fill jobs and supply services. Growing the economy and paying the taxes and staffing the services for an ageing population can only be filled by families having more children or immigration. As far as I know Corbyn is wanting to continue with some form of FOM of labour, in practice their will be little difference in immigration figures whoever wins the election, the tories just pretend different.Do you not agree the country is full?
I applaud immigration but is has to be controlled?
Not a simple wave them in policy the Corbyn is advocating?
I'm sorry but I dont agree
Need to factor in the better health provision in the UK, higher standards of treatment etc. But from those figures in isolation it seems like it's in our favour.
I'm not being short sighted and I have some friends who work in the NHS and I admire the work and hours you do. Most people jump to conclusions that leavers are all bigots when there not.
My issue is not with people coming here and working hard and the NHS is an area I agree we need them. Many looked after my dad in Salford last year before he died.
My issue is more people who come here with no job or prospects and "use" our system to gain more or less free healthcare without ever paying into the system. This has to stop and I totally back the conservatives.
And yes most people now work for less.
I have put countless hours unpaid for 30 years, if I didn't I'd lose my job.
It's not just the NHS mate.
Sorry mate that’s rubbish.I'm not being short sighted and I have some friends who work in the NHS and I admire the work and hours you do. Most people jump to conclusions that leavers are all bigots when there not.
My issue is not with people coming here and working hard and the NHS is an area I agree we need them. Many looked after my dad in Salford last year before he died.
My issue is more people who come here with no job or prospects and "use" our system to gain more or less free healthcare without ever paying into the system. This has to stop and I totally back the conservatives.
And yes most people now work for less.
I have put countless hours unpaid for 30 years, if I didn't I'd lose my job.
It's not just the NHS mate.
Sorry mate that’s rubbish.
No-one likes to see people coming here and take the piss but the problem is nowhere near as big as some people like to make out, and it’s not a one way problem. Not sure how accurate this link is but I have no reason to think it’s wrong.
http://www.humantruth.info/UK_health_tourism.html
If you hate this country so much which countries do you admire and see as beacons , out of interest?Your entitled to your opinion and I respect it
Too be honest we can debate until the cows come home.
Personally I hate this country with a passion and I firmly believe that the ordinary tax payer is treated with complete disdain.
Anything that's done now is too late.
I wont be casting a vote in a few weeks it will end up in the bin.
So from your figures there’s 2.3M EU citizens working in the UK including their dependents and just 1M UK citizens in the EU. Therefore assuming tax rates are broadly comparable there’s 2.3 times as much tax being paid by EU citizens to the UK exchequer than by UK citizens to EU countries. Not having reciprocal health care arrangements would be churlish and would call into question other areas where there is reciprocity, and the bottom line is that the both UK and EU citizens effectively pay for their health care in their host countries through taxation.
I'm not arguing that these EU citizens don't pay their tax or that as a whole, they're not beneficial to Britain.
I'm asking whether we have true reciprocity in terms of healthcare and whether when/if we leave the EU, restricting/charging more to immigrants for healthcare would be beneficial to the country in financial terms.
And given that we provide healthcare to 2.4Million EU citizens for which we billed other EU countries £49 Million, yet the NHS was billed £674 million in 2015 for 1.2 million citizens https://fullfact.org/health/how-much-does-uk-recover-health-costs-eu/, in spite of the demographic differences, I think it's a legitimate question to ask whether - on that issue alone - we are being ripped off.
So from your figures there’s 2.3M EU citizens working in the UK including their dependents and just 1M UK citizens in the EU. Therefore assuming tax rates are broadly comparable there’s 2.3 times as much tax being paid by EU citizens to the UK exchequer than by UK citizens to EU countries. Not having reciprocal health care arrangements would be churlish and would call into question other areas where there is reciprocity, and the bottom line is that the both UK and EU citizens effectively pay for their health care in their host countries through taxation.
Is it not because most eu citizens here are of working age and don’t use the NHS that much, where a lot of the 1,2 million living in the EU have retired there and are more of a burden on their health care ? Just guessing off the top of my head.I'm not arguing that these EU citizens don't pay their tax or that as a whole, they're not beneficial to Britain.
I'm asking whether we have true reciprocity in terms of healthcare and whether when/if we leave the EU, restricting/charging more to immigrants for healthcare would be beneficial to the country in financial terms.
And given that we provide healthcare to 2.4Million EU citizens for which we billed other EU countries £49 Million, yet the NHS was billed £674 million in 2015 for 1.2 million citizens https://fullfact.org/health/how-much-does-uk-recover-health-costs-eu/, in spite of the demographic differences, I think it's a legitimate question to ask whether - on that issue alone - we are being ripped off.
Your response certainly is.Simplistic nonsense
Yeah. Again demographics. By your own estimates there are what 250,000 senior citizens retired abroad? And how does another country looking after our citizens morph into us getting ‘ripped off’? What do you suggest? That they don’t get treatment?
And how is charging an EU national, invited to work here, a £500 annual surcharge on top of taxes and NI that they are already paying going to help British nationals abroad? Or a British senior on a fixed income living in Spain for that matter?
Tell them that at A and E next time a nurse from the EU takes a blood sample. Missing the vein can be a beggar.Good, at least its fucking start.
Even if I agreed with every point you make, I don’t see any policies from any of the political parties that would address it, and The Brexit WA doesn’t appear to either.It's not just demographics though. There's roughly about 150,000 more UK pensioners living in the EU than the reverse. So in the UK, treating a 65 year old costs double the treatment of a 30 year old. That still doesn't come anywhere close to explaining the difference in cost given that there are 1.2 more EU citizens in the UK than the reverse. Even if all of our retirees were 85 (which obviously isn't the case) where they cost 7 times what a 30 year would cost to treat, we still seem to be getting a very bad deal in terms of cost. Obviously, it's partly a problem of our own making because we seem to be poor at recovering costs so introducing a different system might be the best way of bringing about true reciprocity because what we have now isn't even close.
It's not just demographics though. There's roughly about 150,000 more UK pensioners living in the EU than the reverse. So in the UK, treating a 65 year old costs double the treatment of a 30 year old. That still doesn't come anywhere close to explaining the difference in cost given that there are 1.2 more EU citizens in the UK than the reverse. Even if all of our retirees were 85 (which obviously isn't the case) where they cost 7 times what a 30 year would cost to treat, we still seem to be getting a very bad deal in terms of cost. Obviously, it's partly a problem of our own making because we seem to be poor at recovering costs so introducing a different system might be the best way of bringing about true reciprocity because what we have now isn't even close.
I'm not arguing that these EU citizens don't pay their tax or that as a whole, they're not beneficial to Britain.
I'm asking whether we have true reciprocity in terms of healthcare and whether when/if we leave the EU, restricting/charging more to immigrants for healthcare would be beneficial to the country in financial terms.
And given that we provide healthcare to 2.4Million EU citizens for which we billed other EU countries £49 Million, yet the NHS was billed £674 million in 2015 for 1.2 million citizens https://fullfact.org/health/how-much-does-uk-recover-health-costs-eu/, in spite of the demographic differences, I think it's a legitimate question to ask whether - on that issue alone - we are being ripped off.
Is it normal practice for countries to offer free education and healthcare to foreign nationals?
Good, at least its fucking start.