![]() |
Re: Will it be like this for Brits visiting Spain post Brexit?
Originally Posted by amideislas
(Post 12367782)
Freedom of movement benefits the vast majority of EU citizens hugely. Language has little to do with it. Friction-free trade and labour within the world's largest market however, does have something to do with it.
So, back to the matter that you deliberately or ignorantly misrepresented, freedom of movement - this has very little benefit to the large, very large majority of EU citizens who have no interest in uprooting their lives and traveling hundreds of miles to a country with a different culture and a language that they have limited, or no, grasp of. Certainly I, for one, had absolutely ZERO interest in moving to ANY country in Europe, and would happily vote against participation in any deal that gives unrestricted rights to live in the UK to any non-English speaking aliens with a different, sometimes radically so, culture. Of course the grand plan of Germany had been that freedom of movement would allow German companies to suck in huge numbers of Greeks, Italians, and Spaniards when their economies tanked, as they inevitably would under the burdens imposed by the euro. However people from those countries appear to have very little interest in transplanting themselves to Germany even when their own country is in the toilet. So even when circumstances strongly suggest that people should take advantage of freedom of movement, very large numbers of people resist taking up their freedom of movement rights. You obviously have your agenda, that you promote tirelessly, but I wish you would stop making up çräp to support your opinion. |
Re: Will it be like this for Brits visiting Spain post Brexit?
I am not sure you are correct in stating that(I can only say about)Spaniards having no interest in emigrating to Germany.When we came to Spain 30 odd years ago,we found in our area of Costa Blanca that there were a large amount of young people born here with German parents.Remember Franco was sympathetic to the German cause during WW2 & many Germans fled here just before war ending.We employed a Spanish tradesman to do some alterations who explained that his Father had been working for them on properties they bought in the1940,s in this area,notably La Nucia & Calpe.There was a restaurant on the Benidorm-La Nucia road where every 20th.April,a special dinner was held in their previous leader,s memory for his birthday.As happens everywhere,later generations remember their past roots & many young Spanish DID go to take up employment in Germany especially those who had been in construction jobs.This was not only confirmed by my Spanish son-in-law but our local papers ran adverts. even offering language classes for those wanting to relocate.We have a very multi-cultural society here which I can see that is much integrated since we came to Spain,obviously particularly after Spain joined the EU.Many other countries have borders with another speaking a different language & they often easily adapt to that one also.Unlike Britain which does not have that advantage.Pulaski,I have no knowledge of how that works out in the USA but I think you would find that the Europeans are rather more flexible than you imagine.
|
Re: Will it be like this for Brits visiting Spain post Brexit?
Originally Posted by dougal03
(Post 12368296)
I am not sure you are correct in stating that(I can only say about)Spaniards having no interest in emigrating to Germany. .....
|
Re: Will it be like this for Brits visiting Spain post Brexit?
Originally Posted by Pulaski
(Post 12368311)
My point was based on the observation that there have been extremely high levels of unemployment in Spain for at least a decade - 25%, and I have seen figures as high a 50% in some age groups in some areas. If "freedom of movement" was all it is cracked up to be, then most of the unemployed would have decamped to Germany or another country in the area, such as the Netherlands, Austria, Switzerland, etc. My post was based on the fact that very few Spaniards have made that move.
As the building trade was very heavily hit by unemployment many tradesmen did in fact go to other countries in the EU to find work, they did not move their families so they did not in fact "decamp" as you put it. I personally know that this situation was widespread within the construction industry. So the freedom of movement allowed them to work in other places whilst maintaining their families at home. Therefore, the unemployment figures would have been much higher than shown on the internet if they had not had this freedom. Rosemary |
Re: Will it be like this for Brits visiting Spain post Brexit?
Originally Posted by Pulaski
(Post 12368311)
My point was based on the observation that there have been extremely high levels of unemployment in Spain for at least a decade - 25%, and I have seen figures as high a 50% in some age groups in some areas. If "freedom of movement" was all it is cracked up to be, then most of the unemployed would have decamped to Germany or another country in the area, such as the Netherlands, Austria, Switzerland, etc. My post was based on the fact that very few Spaniards have made that move.
|
Re: Will it be like this for Brits visiting Spain post Brexit?
Originally Posted by Rosemary
(Post 12368323)
However, your knowledge is not at ground level so you are reliant on what appears on the internet.
As the building trade was very heavily hit by unemployment many tradesmen did in fact go to other countries in the EU to find work, they did not move their families so they did not in fact "decamp" as you put it. I personally know that this situation was widespread within the construction industry. So the freedom of movement allowed them to work in other places whilst maintaining their families at home. Therefore, the unemployment figures would have been much higher than shown on the internet if they had not had this freedom. .... |
Re: Will it be like this for Brits visiting Spain post Brexit?
Originally Posted by Moses2013
(Post 12368328)
Hmm, you'll actually find that has been the case. At least here in Ireland we've never had more Spanish than now. .....
..... Switzerland is also not in the EU. |
Re: Will it be like this for Brits visiting Spain post Brexit?
Originally Posted by Pulaski
(Post 12368330)
Again, not really my point. If freedom of movement was "perfect", with workers sloshing around the EU like water in a bathtub, unemployment would be approximately equal across the entire EU. It isn't.
|
Re: Will it be like this for Brits visiting Spain post Brexit?
Originally Posted by Pulaski
(Post 12368332)
Also not really my point, which was about the millions who haven't moved, not the relatively much smaller number who have.
But Switzerland is IS covered by the freedom of movement regs - Switzerland had to sign up for that in order to access the Single Market. .... That is why Brexit is such a tough nut to crack - the EU doesn't want Britain to have access to the Single Market without signing up for the related freedom of movement clause. |
Re: Will it be like this for Brits visiting Spain post Brexit?
Originally Posted by Moses2013
(Post 12368334)
:huh:Where does that logic come from Pulaski? If Americans can move freely within the US, why do some States have higher unemployment than others.
People continue to live in the NYC and SF areas when the cost of housing there is absurd and housing is often very small and/or overcrowded, and yet people live there because the like the area, they have friends and relatives etc, and of course there are jobs. Some of them later retire, to Florida or Arizona, in the same way that Brits retire to Spain, but they are basically expats within the US, tied for the bulk of their life to the state where they were born and grew up, relatively few head off to other states and many of them return "home" when they get fed up, laid off, or retire. |
Re: Will it be like this for Brits visiting Spain post Brexit?
Originally Posted by Pulaski
(Post 12368337)
Thankyou! That is EXACTLY my point!!! :rofl: ..... Freedom of Movement doesn't work for a large majority of people. They aren't interested in it, and it has no value to them.
People continue to live in the NYC and SF areas when the cost of housing there is absurd and housing is often very small and/or overcrowded, and yet people live there because the like the area, they have friends and relatives etc, and of course there are jobs. Some of them later retire, to Florida or Arizona, in the same way that Brits retire to Spain, but they are basically expats within the US, tied for the bulk of their life to the state where they were born and grew up, relatively few head off to other states and many of them return "home" when they get fed up, laid off, or retire. Just to add, how many people who were born in Manhattan moved to Queens etc. |
Re: Will it be like this for Brits visiting Spain post Brexit?
Originally Posted by Moses2013
(Post 12368342)
Of course it works because many people living in SF NYC areas weren't born there. ....
It's the many who didn't move who don't give two hoots about Freedom of Movement. |
Re: Will it be like this for Brits visiting Spain post Brexit?
Originally Posted by Pulaski
(Post 12368344)
You're still looking at it from the wrong end - "many" people might have moved to NYC and SF, but vastly, many times more did not, they didn't even leave their home state.
It's the many who didn't move who don't give two hoots about Freedom of Movement. |
Re: Will it be like this for Brits visiting Spain post Brexit?
Originally Posted by Moses2013
(Post 12368351)
But how many people from that State travelled to another State without having to apply for a Visa? Even if the majority of people didn't move to a different State, they still moved house or went to a different neighbourhood. Example: A lot of Dutch people commute to Germany or go shopping (vice versa). They live in a different country but the commute distance would be less than the commute for some people working and living in California, or even the commute within NYC.
|
Re: Will it be like this for Brits visiting Spain post Brexit?
None of that is to say that the "vast majority" did not WANT to move in search of a better life whether it be from one EU country to another or from one US state to another.
There are a million and reasons why they may not have taken the plunge be it the uncertainty, separation from their families or anything else. The Freedom of Movement act just made it easier for those who were willing to take the plunge. |
| All times are GMT -12. The time now is 8:47 pm. |
Powered by vBulletin: ©2000 - 2026, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright © 2026 MH Sub I, LLC dba Internet Brands. All rights reserved. Use of this site indicates your consent to the Terms of Use.