This is complete pie in the sky. The low wage EU workers were doing work that UK workers weren't prepared to do, such as fruit picking and driving lorries for stupid hours and no breaks. The last thing this government intend to do is build a high tech/spec workforce. This is just highfalutin' nonsense that drips from the mouths of government ministers in lieu of any realistic proposals. What the UK is doing is engaging in a race to the bottom, whereby the majority of workers are on zero hours contracts. The high tech side of things is being ruthlessly automated so that the number of real high tech workers will be vanishingly small and most of those will be located in India or the Philippines.Cousin Jack wrote: ↑Fri Jul 22, 2022 5:26 pmWe need to turn the UK into a high tech, high spec, high wage economy, with a safety net welfare system. That was never possible with low wage EU workers having free access. We have cut the free access, now we have to build the high tech/spec workforce, reward them with high wages, and tighten the screw on the dross who chose not to engage. More or less in that order. The benefits will start in 10 - 15 years, the real changes will take probably 2 generations.mangocrazy wrote: ↑Fri Jul 22, 2022 3:48 pm So all the short term disadvantages, costs and pain will somehow change into long term advantages, rewards and sunlit uplands? How exactly is that supposed to work and what is the timescale?
It will not be easy, or quick. The alternative, muddling along in an increasingly centralised bureacratic EU waiting for the implosion is easy, but not where I want to go. Federal states have a huge problem, the US shows well the tensions that exist and that has been a single country for some time now. The US of Europe is coming, but will IMO self destruct soon afterwards, and the fall out will be nasty.
Before I retired a year or so ago I saw all this in action where I worked, in HSBC IT. Anything that could be shipped out to India was, even when good sense told you that it wasn't a smart idea. I'm talking operators in the data centres who have to control critical incidents, for example. I lost count of the number of leaving dos I attended for colleagues who had been made redundant and their function offshored.
If you actually believe what you have written, and aren't just parrotting some party line, then you are clearly deluded. Take a look around you - where are all these high tech/spec jobs and why couldn't they have been created 10, 20, 30 years ago? They don't exist and they won't exist, except a very small number in very specialised pockets of industry. The reality for the overwhelming majority of UK inhabitants will be a slow decline in living standards. There are no sunlit uplands, I'm afraid. It was all just a mirage.