Scotland: Demography and Devolution 1.30 pm Pete Wishart
(Perth and North Perthshire) (SNP) I beg to move, That
this House has considered the Second Report of the Scottish Affairs
Committee, Demography of Scotland and the implications for
devolution, HC 82, and the Government response, HC 938. It
is...Request free trial
Scotland: Demography and Devolution
1.30 pm
-
(Perth and North
Perthshire) (SNP)
I beg to move,
That this House has considered the Second Report of the
Scottish Affairs Committee, Demography of Scotland and the
implications for devolution, HC 82, and the Government
response, HC 938.
It is a pleasure to serve with you chairing this short
debate, Mr McCabe.
Back in February 2016, the Select Committee on Scottish
Affairs launched our inquiry into the demography of
Scotland, to better understand the issues concerning our
populations and the impact those trends will have on
devolved services in Scotland. We had four sessions here in
Westminster and one in Edinburgh, and we were delighted to
visit the Isle of Skye, where we visited the Gaelic college
Sabhal Mòr Ostaig and held an evidence session there. As
always, we are grateful to all those who contributed to the
inquiry.
May I start with the good news? It is very good news.
Scotland’s population is stable and growing. We say in the
report that that is good news. Something that
differentiates us in Scotland so much from the rest of the
United Kingdom is that we welcome population growth in our
nation. When we get news of population growth, Ministers
put out press releases saying that it is a good thing; when
they get similar news down here in the UK, it could not
make Ministers more miserable. That says everything about
the respective attitudes in Scotland and the United
Kingdom.
Only 15 years ago, Scotland was suffering what can only be
called structural depopulation, and there was real concern
that the population might actually dip below the iconic 5
million mark. Scotland’s population has been turned round
and is now at its highest ever level, standing at 5.37
million people resident in Scotland. That population
growth—not dramatic, but steady and good—is owed to
increased fertility among the indigenous population and,
more than anything else, immigration, particularly
immigration from the European Union following the accession
of nations in the early 2000s. After a century of sluggish
population growth punctuated by periods of decline, and
following centuries of emigration, Scotland’s population is
now stable, and that is good news.
I mentioned our history because we as a nation are probably
more familiar with historical issues of emigration than we
are with immigration. That flavours and shapes Scotland’s
response to the current debate about immigration that is
raging throughout the United Kingdom—a debate that probably
hijacked the whole conversation about exiting the European
Union. There are concerns about immigration in Scotland—we
find that in social attitude surveys and opinion polls—but
it is absolutely clear to me and other members of the
Scottish Affairs Committee that there does not seem to be
the same heat in that debate in Scotland as there is in the
rest of the United Kingdom. There is a healthy
understanding of our immigration requirements as a nation
and our need to sustain a healthy population and
demography.
That is the good news, and it is welcome. The not so good
news is that our population increase is lagging way behind
that of the United Kingdom as a whole. That is a critical
part of this equation and a critical relationship. The UK’s
population is projected to increase to 70 million in 2027
and reach 74.3 million by 2039. That is an increase of 15%
over a 25-year period. I know that we are ending free
movement, that there are going to be new immigration
policies in place and that the UK Government are confident
that there will be some sort of Brexitised Canute to stand
against this tide of an ever-increasing movement of people
throughout the world. That is their ambition and what they
intend to do, but according to current figures the
population growth of the UK is expected to be 15% over 25
years. In the same period, Scotland’s population is
expected to grow by 6%.
That population growth gap will have a huge implication for
Scotland’s economy and our ability to support and sustain
an increasingly elderly population. That is because
Scotland is predominantly funded on the basis of its
population in the form of a block grant that we receive and
is calculated on the percentage-based Barnett formula.
Increasingly, the distribution of resources throughout the
United Kingdom will be on a per capita basis. The main
concern, therefore, is that Scotland’s revenues will not
keep pace with those in the rest of the United Kingdom.
That could be increasingly acute as we come to renegotiate
the fiscal framework in 2020, where population concerns
will once again be factored in, possibly to Scotland’s
deficit.
The other issue the Committee found is that population
growth is variable across Scotland as a whole. That is why
the Committee visited the Isle of Skye to try to better
understand the regional variations and the issues in
Scotland’s rural areas, in particular the highlands and
islands. We found pockets of success, particularly in the
highlands, but an otherwise ongoing story of decline in
Scotland’s rural areas. For example, most of the new
population growth happens in Scotland’s cities and
conurbations close to them. In my constituency, in Perth
and Kinross, we have solid population growth of around 15%;
in Edinburgh, where my hon. Friend the Member for Edinburgh
North and Leith (Deidre Brock) is resident, it is in the
region of 20%, and in Midlothian it is 26%. That contrasts
with areas of the highlands and islands that have
experienced net population decline, the worst example being
the Western Isles, which is expecting a population decline
of some 14%.
Scotland has one of the lowest population densities in the
whole of Europe. During the inquiry we heard that
Sutherland in north-east Scotland has lower population
density than Mali in northern Africa—a nation that is
entirely covered by Sahara desert. More than anything, that
suggests that Scotland is not full up and that we can
accommodate many more immigrants to help us to address some
of the issues in our economy.
Lurking underneath the statistics are demographic issues
that really need to be tackled. The age profile of
Scotland’s population is rising at a faster rate than that
of the UK as a whole. Several witnesses we spoke to in the
course of the inquiry identified the combination of
Scotland’s lower population growth, ageing population and
lower life expectancy as one of the key challenges it will
face in the delivery of public services in the coming years
and decades. Over the next 25 years, Scotland’s population
will have a lower proportion of working-age people than it
does now, and they will be expected to support an even
bigger number of dependants. That is referred to as the
“dependency ratio”—several groups took exception to that
phrase when we visited Edinburgh, as my colleagues will
remember. In the next 25 years, the dependency ratio will
increase from 58 dependents to every 100 working-age people
to 67 dependants to every 100 working-age people. That has
serious implications for the delivery of public services.
The Committee found two particular areas where the
dependency ratio might have an impact. The first is the
size of the tax base and the ability to service through
that tax base an ageing population. Secondly, it will be
much more difficult to fill some vacancies in a number of
sectors, including health and social care. An ageing
population will increase demand for those services without
there being a commensurate increase in the pool of
working-age people available to fill those vacancies. That
will have to be factored in to the planning and developing
of Scotland’s public services over the coming years and
decades.
Another thing the Committee found during our inquiry is
that life expectancy and healthy life expectancy,
especially for men, are lower in Scotland than in other
parts of the UK. A new report, which we did not have the
opportunity to take into account, has emerged in the past
few weeks. That report, produced by the University of
Glasgow, suggests that for the first time in 150 years life
expectancy is not increasing in Scotland. It found a spike
of more deaths in 2014 than at any time in Scotland since
the second world war. We are not in a position to assess
that, but it would be particularly worrying if that was a
trend that is beginning in Scotland and was a reflection of
some of the social policies that have been carried out not
only in the name of this Government, but across both
Governments in the United Kingdom. That is something we
very much want to keep an eye on over the next few years.
The health inequalities are what concern the Committee more
than anything else, and again we saw a disparity not only
in the United Kingdom but in Scotland. The most revealing
example was given by Professor David Bell, who talked about
the train journey from Jordanhill in Glasgow to Bridgeton
in Glasgow and how life expectancy declines by 15 years in
the course of it. Professor Bell also told us that
Jordanhill’s people have the same life expectancy as those
of Canning Town here in London. Canning Town is a tube
journey away from Westminster, where life expectancy is
seven years higher. The disparity across the United Kingdom
is 21 years, which surely should set off all sorts of alarm
bells when we are planning services and considering how to
reduce health inequalities.
The Committee considered what would be required to resolve
some of the difficulties that we identified in our inquiry.
First, we note the Scottish Government’s target of matching
population growth with the EU15, which was set in 2007 to
be completed by 2017. The Scottish Government have been
relatively successful in ensuring that we have achieved the
EU25 mean. Some witnesses praised the Scottish Government
for setting the population target, saying that it was in
the interests of the nation to aspire to be population
healthy and demographically healthy. However,
some—primarily those in the UK Government, who did not see
much value in it at all—felt that there was no need for a
population target and questioned the whole idea.
None of our witnesses could tell us the optimum population
size for Scotland, although a few gave valid examples of
their efforts to do so. Professor Jim Hunter, emeritus
professor of history at the University of the Highlands and
Islands, told us that it is difficult to establish
Scotland’s optimum population. When we were on Skye, he
told us about some of the reasons given for the clearances,
including that the population in the particular area was
unable to sustain itself, but he also said to the
Committee, revealingly, that
“the population of London exceeded the capacity of the
London area to grow potatoes and turnips a heck of a long
time ago, so it depends entirely what sort of economy you
are looking to create here.”
I thought that those were particularly wise words.
We found, unsurprisingly, that what is required to keep a
healthy demography and a stable and competitive rate of
population growth is an obvious equation between emigration
and immigration. We must retain more people in Scotland and
do more to attract working-age migrants to Scotland, but
that will be a lot harder to achieve with the end of free
movement of people from the European Union.
To give an example of the sort of figures that we are
talking about, in 2014-15, net inward migration to Scotland
was 27,968, while net migration to England was 298,882.
That is a huge disparity in our ability to attract
immigrants. We must do more to attract migrants to
Scotland, but it is particularly difficult to achieve when
the legislative levers remain in the gift of a UK
Government resistant to immigration and concerned to the
point of obsession with immigrant numbers. The UK
Government, in their response to the report, defiantly
refused to give the Scottish Government responsibility and
opportunities to address their immigration concerns, and
they have ended schemes such as the Fresh Talent
initiative, which allowed us, at least in relation to the
student population, to try to increase our population by
giving incentives to stay in Scotland.
I mention that because something important and alarming
came out in the statistics given to us by National Records
of Scotland. There has been a positive spike in Scotland’s
immigration figures: the number of people coming to
Scotland in the critical 19-to-23 age bracket old has
risen. That suggests that people are coming to Scotland
attracted by the offer from our excellent, world-class
universities. However, there is an almost commensurate
spike in emigration among those aged 23 to 27. That
suggests to me that people are leaving Scotland once they
have been educated, because they do not have the
opportunity to stay there.
-
(Stirling)
(SNP)
As my hon. Friend might be aware, in 2015-16, Stirling
University had 930 EU students and 1,350 overseas students;
20% of the student population came from overseas. It
clarifies how important immigration is to solving the
problem not just of the skills base, which he correctly
identified, but to the universities’ health in the future.
What are his views on that?
-
That is exactly what we found in the course of our inquiry.
One of the report’s recommendations was that the Government
reconsider their approach and attitude to the post-study
work scheme offer. That would address the issues that my
hon. Friend raises, but to me the problem is much more
fundamental. It is beyond absurd that we attract all those
talented young people to Scotland with the quality of our
world-class universities and train and educate them to a
high standard simply to watch them sail away, when we need
those people to help grow and contribute to our community.
-
(Glasgow East)
(Ind)
I wish the hon. Gentleman a happy birthday and congratulate
him on securing this debate. He is making an important
point. One of the few issues that unites political parties
in Scotland is the need to reintroduce the post-study work
visa. Does he share my concern about the 80% drop in non-EU
students remaining in the UK after graduation since the
scrapping of that vital scheme? We must continue to press
the Government to stop the brain drain of global talent
from Scotland.
-
The hon. Lady is absolutely spot on. I wish we could do
more to convince this Government that they need to
reconsider and help us to ensure that we keep those
talented people. Our statistics show that we require these
people to remain in Scotland; they are welcome in Scotland,
but there has been absolutely nothing from the Government
in response. They have run some pilots on a post-study work
visa scheme, but none of them in Scotland. We saw in the
Government’s response why Scotland was not included. All of
that is totally unsatisfactory. It is one thing that this
Government can do that is straightforward, simple and easy
to administer. Give us a break; give us a chance. Do
something to help us address one of the pressing issues
facing our community. We want it, we are ready to do it,
the universities want it and it is in the gift of the
Government to make that simple little change to help our
higher education sector.
The Government say in their response that Scotland should
use its range of devolved powers to attract immigrants, and
they highlight powers that we could use to achieve it,
talking about things such as health and education. I
remember the former Chief Secretary to the Treasury sitting
across from us in Committee and telling us that the one
thing we could use to attract immigrants to Scotland was
our planning powers. That was the sum total of what we had
at our disposal. How we are supposed to attract immigrants
without the levers of immigration powers is totally beyond
me.
What I am hearing from the Government—it is a strange
proposal and a sustained one, too, because we hear it
practically every day—is that apparently Scotland’s offer
for immigrants has been diminished because we now have
powers over income tax. Somehow, we are disincentivising
people because we have a differential rate of income tax in
Scotland. I do not know about you, Mr McCabe, but I do not
imagine potential immigrants in town squares in Krakow and
Budapest being put off coming to Scotland because the
higher rate of income tax kicks in at £40,000 instead of
£43,000. I suspect that that would be the last thing on
their minds.
-
The Minister for Immigration (Mr Robert Goodwill)
It might not have crossed the hon. Gentleman’s mind, but
employers considering where to locate might look at the
rate of income tax for their new investment.
-
I am grateful to the Minister. I suggest that although that
argument is always convenient, the evidence for it is
flimsy, verging on non-existent. Nobody has presented us
with anything to support that view.
Yes, income tax is a feature and a factor when it comes to
the suite of taxation that people have to pay, but it is
just one part of it. England, for example, has higher rates
of council tax and higher house prices. We have free
education for our young people and free prescriptions.
Taxation comes in many forms. The ludicrous suggestion that
Scotland is uniquely the highest-taxed part of the United
Kingdom does not bear any scrutiny at all. To suggest that
it disincentivises people from coming to Scotland is beyond
absurd and almost ridiculous. What changes people’s
decision whether to come to a nation is powers over
immigration and the ability to incentivise people to come
through means such as a post-study work scheme, available
jobs and a growing economy, and a growing economy needs a
healthy working-age population. Those are the very factors
we have considered and tried to address in our report.
Emigration from Scotland is an issue. Scotland is still an
emigrant country; it is a feature that has characterised
our nation throughout the centuries, and we are still
losing far too many young people rather than retaining
them. The Scottish Government have put in place a number of
measures to hold on to young people in Scotland, and we
wish them well in those endeavours, but as long as we
remain a dependent nation within the United Kingdom, there
will always be other attractions, particularly in huge
centres such as London. We cannot build that capacity to
retain people in our capital and other cities, so for as
long as we remain a dependent nation, it will probably
always be likely that our young people will be attracted to
the bright lights of London. For example, when my son
finished at Glasgow University, he came down here to look
for work opportunities that he could not find in Scotland,
because we have not been able to put in the resources there
to develop our economy and give our young people those
chances. As long as we remain part of the United Kingdom, I
believe that we will always have difficulties.
-
Mr (Blaydon)
(Lab)
I congratulate the hon. Gentleman on his Committee’s
important report. He knows as well as I do that one of the
reasons we are having this debate is the UK Government’s
paranoia about getting immigration numbers down to below
100,000. Have he and his Committee given any consideration
to addressing some of the concerns that I have heard,
particularly in the Irish situation, that if we allow
Scotland to have its own immigration policy and bring in as
many people as possible, we will not be able to prevent
those people from going to Scotland for a fortnight and
then coming down to England and completely upsetting the
balance that people want to see? I think that is nonsense,
but it is one of the reasons behind the Government’s
refusal to let Scotland handle immigration. We have to work
together to find an answer to that, because it is one of
the reasons that the Government will use to prevent
Scotland from addressing its genuine needs and achieving
what the hon. Gentleman and I want to see happening in
Scotland.
-
It was not within the scope of our inquiry to look at such
solutions; we just wanted to get a snapshot of the quality
of Scotland’s population growth and some of the demographic
issues, and to suggest ways in which they could be
addressed—but the hon. Gentleman is right about what the
Government say. They say it all the time, but they are
totally ignoring the fact that other nations throughout the
world are able to manage sub-national immigration policies
quite successfully, particularly Canada and Australia,
whose policies work perfectly well and have none of the
impacts that the hon. Gentleman mentions.
There is another solution, which has just come on the table
in the last year. As a result of the Scotland Act 2016,
there is now a Scottish rate of income tax set by the
Scottish Parliament. We now know where Scottish income tax
payers are resident, so if there is any breach, we know
where they are. If someone came to Scotland from Krakow or
Budapest, for example, with the sole intention of abusing
the job opportunities we gave them by then disappearing to
London, they would immediately disappear into a black
market. They would not be able to work because they would
be officially resident in Scotland. Why on earth would
somebody want to disappear from a legitimate market, in
which they have every opportunity to find a job and
contribute to the economy, and go to a black market, in
which they will be pursued relentlessly by the Minister’s
Home Office team? That is my answer to the hon. Gentleman’s
question, but it was a good question and I am pretty
certain that we will hear more on it from the Minister.
-
Mr Goodwill
indicated assent.
-
The Minister is giving me a thumbs up, so we can expect him
to address the matter in his reply.
I will finish my speech because I know that other hon.
Members want to speak. We will always be fighting a losing
battle if we cannot grow our population through
immigration. Our report calls for the Government to give us
a chance, give us a break, and consider devolving some
immigration powers to Scotland to let us grow our
population. If the Minister and the UK Government do not do
so, they will be holding Scotland’s hands behind its back,
because the population gap between us and the rest of the
United Kingdom will have massive implications for our
economy and our ability to provide proper social services
in Scotland. Population and demographic issues will be
central to social planning, healthy economic outcomes and
growth over the next decade, but Scotland has a UK-wide
immigration policy designed by the Minister and his
colleagues that practically works against our vital
national interests. If there is one thing that the
Government can do to help us to address those issues, it is
to give us the levers to address them.
-
(in the Chair)
I am sure that we all wish the hon. Gentleman a very happy
birthday.
1.53 pm
-
(Edinburgh North and
Leith) (SNP)
It is a great pleasure to serve under your chairpersonship,
Mr McCabe.
At the risk of being confused with a ray of sunshine, may I
lay out some of the grievances rightly held by Scots about
population and demographics and put them in some kind of
historical context? Not all of them are directly the fault
of this place—some of them might even be someone else’s
fault—but hear me out. At the beginning of the 18th
century, Scotland’s population was 1 million, while
England’s was 5 million. That ratio of roughly 1:5 stayed
the same throughout the 18th century and into the beginning
of the 19th, but Scotland’s relative population shrank
during the 19th century until the ratio was 1:7.
It was really the clearances that set Scotland’s population
growth back on its heels. Private greed played a part, but
so did Government decisions. The British Fisheries Board
established fishing stations at Wick, Tobermory and
Ullapool, dragging people from the land and the industry
that they were familiar with and making them cling to the
edges of Scotland, as someone once put it, in a barren and
unfamiliar area. The Government were also determined to end
the clan system; its organisation seemed all too
militaristic and people’s loyalty to a clan chief, rather
than to the Crown, could not be tolerated.
The clearances were the biggest drag on Scotland’s
population growth until the de-industrial revolution of the
Thatcher years, when the crushing of communities echoed the
crushing of communities during the clearances. Scotland’s
population shrank under Thatcher as young Scots were forced
out and sought opportunity elsewhere, which removed a
breeding population as well as an economically active
population. It took until 2010 for Scotland’s population to
recover to pre-Thatcher levels, and today it stands at less
than a tenth of England’s.
There is now another Tory threat to Scotland’s population
and prosperity: Brexit. The UK’s population growth from
2000 to 2015 was roughly a third native-born, a third
EU-born and a third born elsewhere, whereas half of
Scotland’s population growth was from EU nationals and only
14% was native-born. Scotland needs those people—those
workers. Only 4% of EU nationals in Scotland are over 65,
and 16% are under 16. The working-age population of EU
immigrants is 80% of the total, with a 79% employment
rate—six points ahead of the Scottish average. As I think
my hon. Friend the Member for Perth and North Perthshire
(Pete Wishart) alluded to, almost a fifth of Scotland’s
population is over retirement age. We need the supply of
young, energetic workers from the EU, which is now under
threat from a Brexit that might only mean Brexit to the
Prime Minister, but means a potential major economic threat
to Scotland.
From the clearances, through Margaret Thatcher, to Brexit,
Scotland’s population has been getting a raw deal. Scotland
needs to get out from under that and create a welcoming and
entrepreneurial environment to grow our economy and provide
a secure future. As my hon. Friend said, we need an open
door for immigrants, and we need immigration policies that
are clearly very unlike the policies touted in this place
by this Government.
We cannot be left subject to this frankly xenophobic regime
if we are to build the population and the economy that
Scotland needs. I would prefer it if we agreed to be
friendly neighbours and if Scottish independence created a
new relationship, but it is possible to do it before then.
My hon. Friend alluded to the examples of Australia and
Canada, but it is possible for the UK to have different
immigration systems for different areas. We know that that
is possible because it already happens; the UK runs
different immigration regimes for Gibraltar, the Channel
Islands and the Isle of Man, for example. No, the
circumstances are not the same—I am aware of that—but the
precedent is there, and that example shows that it is
possible. There is no reason why Scotland cannot have an
immigration regime tailored to our needs even while we are
stuck in the UK. We need to keep the door open for the free
movement of the peoples of the European Union. Of the four
pillars of EU membership, that is the one that I believe
Scotland needs to keep most of all.
1.58 pm
-
(Dundee West) (SNP)
It is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship, Mr
McCabe, and to follow two wonderful and detailed speeches.
I said in this Chamber only three months ago that
“the Government’s current immigration policy is completely
failing Scotland.”—[Official Report, 8 December 2016; Vol.
618, c. 164WH.]
The Scottish Affairs Committee is now leading another
debate based on a report that has concluded, yet again,
that a different immigration system is needed for Scotland,
rather than a one-size-fits-all UK policy. Hon. Members may
ask why. Well, our report examined the different population
trends in Scotland and why the challenges presented by
those trends should be reflected in the UK Government’s
policy making. One of the key challenges we found was that
over the next 25 years, the average age of the Scottish
population will increase dramatically, resulting in far
fewer people paying taxes and fewer people being available
to work in health and social care to support an ageing
population.
The good news is that after years of decline, the
population of Scotland is now gradually increasing, mainly
due to the decrease in outward migration. However, if a
hard Tory Brexit has a negative economic impact on
Scotland, it is highly likely that outward migration will
increase again. Over the next 25 years, the population of
Scotland is predicted to increase by 7%, but London’s
population is predicted to increase by more than triple
that rate, meaning that the economy of the UK will be even
more dominated by the needs of London and the south-east of
England.
-
It strikes me that we have had debates in the House of
Commons recently on boundary changes, during which the
Government argued that those changes had to be based upon
population. Based on the point that my hon. Friend has just
made, does it not signal the failure of the current policy
that according to the Government, Scotland’s number of MPs
relative to England will be decreased again and again and
again, as it has been over the last 20 or 230 years?
-
My hon. Friend makes a valuable point. In fact, if the
number of MPs in one area, the north-west of Scotland
highlands, is reduced, the area covered by one MP will be
larger than Belgium. That is completely unacceptable,
particularly in the face of Brexit and the amount of work
that will result from it, which is likely to be a burden
for all MPs.
Scotland’s recent population increase is partly due to
inward migration. However, UK Government policies will
undoubtedly have a negative impact on Scotland’s population
growth. Those policies include barriers to immigration
resulting from Brexit, which I have already mentioned; the
scrapping of post-study work visas, which is already
causing considerable damage; and the continuing uncertainty
about whether EU citizens will be allowed to remain in the
UK.
Our Committee’s report also found that population is a key
issue in rural areas in Scotland that already have
extremely low levels of population density and a pattern of
younger people leaving to look for work elsewhere. On a
Committee visit to Dumfries quite recently, we heard that
in rural areas it is already hard to fill posts in social
and health care, and it is predicted that that situation
will get worse.
While Scotland’s land reform and rural broadband schemes
are intended to boost economic activity in rural areas,
which can only be a good thing, achieving that aim will not
be possible if there are not enough people living in those
areas to develop the economy. Again, the situation will
become even worse if our exit from the EU reduces
immigration and leads to more young people leaving Scotland
to find work elsewhere.
I will give a more detailed example from my own
constituency in Dundee. There are many issues in the
demography report that have particularly serious
implications for my city. To put things into perspective,
Dundee has the highest proportion of students in higher
education of anywhere in Scotland. The university sector is
vital to the economic health of our city. Indeed, a quarter
of University of Dundee students come from outside the UK
and, as was set out in a report last week, more than 175
jobs in Dundee are fully or partially funded by EU grants.
If Brexit leads to a reduction in the number of
international students and a loss of EU nationals working
in our universities, without doubt that will have a
significant negative effect on the economic wellbeing of my
city.
As many Members will know, Dundee is currently undergoing a
£1 billion regeneration of its waterfront, at the heart of
which is the new V&A Museum of Design. Immigration and
population growth have the effect of enhancing economic
activity and creating jobs. Therefore, any threat to
immigration will hinder the positive transformation that
Dundee is currently undertaking.
I will focus on one sector for a moment, because Abertay
University was the world’s first university to have a
degree in designing video games. I chair the all-party
group on video games, so I will touch on that sector
briefly. My constituency is a cluster for game designers.
To give people a flavour of the kind of games that come out
of Dundee, one of them—“Grand Theft Auto”—has already
broken six Guinness world records. Within the video games
industry, talent is the No. 1 priority for businesses, and
it is vital that the industry is able to recruit highly
skilled international talent without there being
immigration barriers to their working here.
A UK-wide survey by the video games industry body UK
Interactive Entertainment, which was published just
yesterday, showed that more than 98% of respondents—we
might as well say 100%, as we are just about there—believe
that EU nationals with skills needed in the games industry
should have a blanket right to live and work in the UK.
I turn to a sector that is important in my neighbouring
constituencies, in particular that of my hon. Friend the
Member for Perth and North Perthshire (Pete Wishart). Each
year, large numbers of temporary migrants from the EU come
to work in the fruit picking industry in the constituency
next to mine. If that flow of workers is cut off by Brexit,
that will have a hugely negative impact on this vital part
of our local economy.
-
I am grateful to my hon. Friend for mentioning my
constituency, and he is absolutely right that we have great
concerns about what will happen in our world-class berry
fruit sector. However, the situation is even worse than
that. I am sure that he will have heard examples similar to
those I have heard of European nationals in our
constituencies who, just because of the current climate,
are thinking about leaving, because there is a sense that
they are not welcome here any more. They are feeling the
chill wind blowing from the UK Government, which is putting
their very existence here at risk, as they are used as
bargaining chips. Has he come across anybody like that in
his constituency?
-
Yes indeed. In fact, tomorrow, which is my constituency
day, I have four surgery appointments with EU nationals who
are similarly concerned about the future. The biggest issue
that we have is in social and health care, particularly in
our care homes, where there is a large percentage of EU
nationals among the staff. As Dundee is growing to meet the
needs placed on it to be a creative hub for Scotland, we
also have a growing hospitality sector, which is again
largely served by EU nationals.
However, despite all the evidence that the UK Government
received though the Scottish Affairs Committee report, they
have once again completely disregarded calls to ensure that
any new immigration policies meet the needs of Scotland’s
demography. Not only that, but they have once again
completely rejected calls for a more flexible post-study
work visa system for international students in Scotland.
Therefore, it is crystal clear that Scotland has different
immigration needs from other parts of the UK, and a
one-size-fits-all approach simply is not working.
In 2014, the UK Government told Scotland to lead the UK and
not leave it, claiming that it would be treated as an equal
partner within the UK. Last weekend, however, the Prime
Minister said that control over policy areas that have
already been devolved, such as fishing and agriculture, may
not go to Holyrood in the wake of Brexit, further raising
fears that devolution will be undermined rather than
enhanced. That is nothing short of a scandal and flies in
the face of the devolution settlement of 1998.
If anyone is in any doubt about how difficult the UK
Government have made our immigration system, they only have
to look at a tweet put out by Faisal Islam the other night.
It pointed out that under the same EU law a permanent
residence form in Ireland is five pages long and free; in
Germany, it is two pages long and costs eight euros; and in
the UK, it is 85 pages long and costs £65.
Scotland is not full up. As I have said, our demographic
and workforce needs are different to those of the rest of
the UK. With UK Government’s current rhetoric signalling a
move towards a hard Tory Brexit, it is becoming
increasingly obvious that their polices will seriously
damage Scotland’s population growth. The UK Government’s
immigration policy in no way recognises Scotland’s needs or
serves our economic and societal interests. The UK
Government continue to resist pragmatic change that would
not only reduce the impact of Scotland’s ageing demographic
but help Scotland to attract international students. What
would really benefit Scotland would be the full devolvement
of immigration power, so that we can ensure our country’s
prosperous future. If the UK Government are unable to
tailor their immigration needs for Scotland, then
Scotland’s independence will be the only solution.
2.07 pm
-
(Argyll and Bute)
(SNP)
As always, Mr McCabe, it is a pleasure to serve under your
chairmanship.
I begin by commending the report of the Scottish Affairs
Committee. It is a significant contribution to the debate
and it is supported by numerous experts. It makes it very
clear that Scotland’s population needs to grow and that
Scotland requires immigration in order to make that happen.
As my hon. Friend the Member for Perth and North Perthshire
(Pete Wishart) rightly said, the United Kingdom’s
population is projected to increase by 15%, while it is
reckoned that the population of my constituency of Argyll
and Bute will fall by 8%. That situation is unsustainable
and unworkable, because despite being an exceptionally
beautiful part of the world, my constituency is—almost
uniquely—suffering depopulation. We have an ageing and
increasingly non-economically active population, and our
young people are leaving to spend their economically
productive years outside Argyll and Bute.
We desperately need people to come to work in our rural
communities. We need EU nationals and others to be able to
come to Argyll and Bute, and we welcome the overwhelmingly
positive contribution they make day in and day out to
Argyll and Bute and to Scotland generally. We need that to
continue, so we need a system that will allow Scotland to
find a bespoke immigration policy, one in which Scotland’s
needs are met, rather than simply being subsumed into the
needs of the rest of the United Kingdom, and—
-
(Edinburgh South)
(Lab)
I apologise for interrupting the hon. Gentleman; he was in
full flow and I perhaps should have waited. Nevertheless, I
am delighted to be able to intervene now.
In this report, we have concentrated a lot on migration. I
agree with the report, which says there should be a much
more flexible approach to immigration, right across the
country—in all parts of the UK and not just in Scotland.
Indeed, there is maybe even an argument for internal
Scottish-type different approaches to immigration. One of
the key recommendations of the report was about the number
of young people in particular who leave Scotland to live in
the rest of the United Kingdom. We need to find ways of
making sure that those young people not only stay but are
able to contribute to the economy. That is not about
migration, because I am talking about young Scots who are
moving. How does he suggest that we should deal with that
issue?
-
I take on board what the hon. Gentleman is saying, but I
think there are two strands to it. In Argyll and Bute, we
need to keep our young people and attract young people back
into the constituency. That is about physical connectivity,
digital connectivity and making Argyll and Bute an
attractive place for young people to come back to and to
not leave in the first place, but that in itself will not
be enough. We have to be able to attract EU nationals and
others to Argyll and Bute and make them stay. It is not an
either/or situation; we should be able to keep our young
folk and at the same time attract people into Argyll and
Bute to live and work and to make it home.
Part of that is having a bespoke Scottish solution. If
Australia, Canada and Switzerland can have immigration
policies that differentiate between the different needs of
the different parts of the country, surely there is no
reason, other than political will, why that cannot happen
here. Argyll and Bute Council’s plan for economic
regeneration was predicated on it continuing to be able to
attract EU nationals into the area. I am afraid to say that
that plan seems to have been holed below the waterline
since last June.
When I was first elected to this place almost two years
ago, I came here knowing that I would fight austerity and
oppose Trident renewal and that we would seek to deliver
the vow in full, as was promised after the 2014 referendum.
Never in my wildest dreams did I think that my colleagues
and I would have to stand in this place to defend the right
of the almost 200,000 EU nationals living in Scotland to
remain in the country they have chosen to call home. I did
not imagine a scenario where I would have to stand in this
place and argue that 1,800 of my constituents—EU nationals
in Argyll and Bute—should have the basic right to remain in
the country in which they have chosen to settle, raise
their family and contribute.
What have we become? How in the 21st century are we
debating whether 1,800 of my constituents—mums, dads,
husbands, wives, brothers, sisters, employers and
employees—have to choose whether to stay or go? They are
genuinely fearful for the future. I put it to the Minister
that that is because the Government have chosen not to
guarantee their future status within the United Kingdom. As
my hon. Friend the Member for Dundee West (Chris Law) said,
that policy, coupled with the Government’s immigration
policy, is holding Scotland back.
In the past week, five families from my constituency have
contacted me, all deeply concerned. Last weekend, Rita
Windham-Wright, a Hungarian national living in Oban with
her Scottish husband and children, informed me that because
of the uncertainty, they were thinking of leaving Scotland.
Celia Krezdorn from Helensburgh—she is a Swiss national
married to a German, and she has brought her children up in
Scotland—said she was deeply worried about what the future
holds and what the lack of clarity will mean for her
family. Jean Michel Voinot, a French national living in
Lochgilphead with his wife and young children, asked, “Will
my family be allowed to stay?”
On Wednesday, another Hungarian woman, Edit Makai, asked me
whether it would be okay to take her child to meet her
Hungarian grandmother in Budapest. She was worried they
might have problems getting back into the country. Just
yesterday, Josianne, a French national who has lived and
worked in Rosneath for more than 20 years—she is a highly
active member of the community —contacted me to say that
she is fearful she may have to leave her home and her
family post-Brexit. The Minister may well dismiss those
cases, but he has to accept that those are the genuinely
held fears of constituents who have approached me as their
Member of Parliament asking questions that I would never
have expected to have to answer.
-
Mr Goodwill
Does the hon. Gentleman think that Scottish or British
people living elsewhere in Europe deserve similar
assurances, or is he prepared to move ahead unilaterally to
guarantee the rights of EU nationals living here without
getting the same guarantees for the status of Scottish
people living abroad?
-
I will come on to that point in just a moment, because it
is a vital question, and I will answer it. As I was saying,
those are the genuine concerns of real people, and I have
to ask: what kind of Government know they are causing such
fear and alarm, yet refuse to act on it? I raised many of
those cases at Home Office questions on Monday, and I was
told by the Home Secretary that it was up to me to reassure
them of how valued they are. I have done that; I have
written to every single EU national in my constituency
telling them how valued they are, but it is not in my gift
to make the problem go away. The only people who can give
that cast-iron guarantee and reassurance are the
Government, and sadly they have refused to do it—they have
chosen not to do it.
-
My hon. Friend is making a powerful case on one of the most
important points. I have many similar stories. For example,
in Tyndrum—it is just next to his constituency and on the
edge of my constituency—I met with the staff of the Real
Food Café, most of whom are workers who have come from the
European Union. They were extremely distressed about what
the future held for them and what the rules were. My
frustration was that I could not give them any real answers
to most of the questions that came up because the
Government have not given us any real answers. Does he
agree that the Government need to get their skates on and
give us some idea of how this is supposed to look, so that
we can reassure these people about their futures?
-
Sadly, it is a familiar tale. People are genuinely worried
about the future, and the Government have to do something.
They have to say to these folk that their future is
guaranteed, come what may. It is not too late for the
Government to do the right thing. Indeed, I implore them to
do the right thing. I have heard the Government make the
argument many times that only when other countries
guarantee the position of UK citizens living in the
European Union will they do the same. In direct response to
the Minister’s question, I do not think that is good
enough. I do not think that is doing the right thing. It is
playing politics with people’s lives.
Doing the right thing is saying unequivocally—regardless of
what others do—to those EU citizens living, working and
contributing economically and socially to the wellbeing of
this country, “We guarantee your status will not change
with Brexit and you are welcome here.” If the Government
choose not to guarantee European nationals the right to
remain, history will judge it a national disgrace. I am
proud and delighted that history will show that my
colleagues and I had no part in that and opposed it every
step of the way. So far as we are concerned, every single
EU national living in Scotland is very welcome, and we
thank them all for the positive contribution they have
made, making our country a better place for all of us.
Finally, in my maiden speech in May 2015, I said that the
Government had to recognise that the four constituent parts
of this United Kingdom had, for the first time ever, voted
four different ways and that as a result there could be no
more one-size-fits-all policies covering everyone and
everything from Truro to Thurso. That includes immigration.
Our needs are not necessarily the rest of the country’s
needs. If the Government are genuine about the respect
agenda, they have to respect that and guarantee that our
country can grow economically, culturally and politically
into something different, if it chooses so to do, and that
is with our EU nationals. I urge the Government to act
accordingly and change their policy immediately.
2.19 pm
-
(Rutherglen and
Hamilton West) (SNP)
It is a honour to serve under your chairmanship, Mr McCabe.
I thank my hon. Friends the Members for Edinburgh North and
Leith (Deidre Brock), for Dundee West (Chris Law) and for
Argyll and Bute (Brendan O'Hara) for taking part in today’s
debate, as well as those who made interventions—my hon.
Friends the Members for Stirling (Steven Paterson) and for
Glasgow East (Natalie McGarry) and the hon. Member for
Edinburgh South (Ian Murray).
I am grateful to the Liaison Committee for selecting the
report for debate, and to the very accomplished Chair of
the Select Committee on Scottish Affairs, my hon. Friend
the Member for Perth and North Perthshire (Pete Wishart). I
wish him a very happy birthday. He shares his birthday with
Yuri Gagarin and today also marks 31 years since the space
station Mir was launched. Whatever his plans are after
today’s debate, I hope he has a truly stellar day.
-
I did not know that—I am genuinely surprised. I am always
told that I share a birthday with Martin Fry from ABC, who
had much greater success than I did in music, selling many
more albums than I did in his illustrious career.
-
I thank my hon. Friend for that informative intervention,
which will now be in Hansard. Mir was succeeded, of course,
by the international space station—arguably one of
humankind’s greatest achievements, and a reminder that we
achieve more working together than we do apart. That is an
important thing to bear in mind, particularly as we enter
an ugly, post-Brexit, insular, isolationist, anti-immigrant
phase in British politics.
We are often referred to in this place simply as “the
nationalists” but, in truth, we have more than proven
ourselves to be the largest group of internationalists in
the House. Of late, I and my colleagues have received what
can only be described as a barrage of pro-EU and
internationalist correspondence from all corners of the UK.
It is, in fact, a lovefest for our strong, principled
stances on the EU and immigration. What is very clear from
those reaching out to us is that many people feel
unrepresented in this place as we go through the process of
exiting the European Union. The people of Scotland are
being ably represented by a strong team of SNP MPs here and
an incredibly effective SNP Government in Holyrood. We will
continue to push for solutions that will help to solve the
unique challenges that we face.
The UK Government cannot simply continue with their
one-size-fits-all approach to policy. In its response to
the Scottish Affairs Committee report, the Government
state:
“Our immigration system is designed for the whole of the
UK, taking account of Scotland’s needs.”
That is demonstrably not the case. It is completely at odds
with the views of Scottish businesses and universities and
of civic society in general. Scotland faces demographic
challenges in the coming years. We are not unique in that
respect, but our needs are not the same as those of other
nations in the UK, and, despite the UK Government’s
protestations, they are not being taken account of by the
Home Office. While the UK Government continues with their
increasingly bitter and nasty narrative on immigration, the
SNP Scottish Government are focused on increasing
population growth, which has been historically slow in
Scotland compared with England, while also making Scotland
an attractive place to work and live.
-
My hon. Friend attended the same sessions as I did and she
would have heard from a swathe of Scottish public
opinion—from business leaders, to trade unions, to higher
education, to everybody involved in business and
academia—that we require a differentiated type of
immigration system. Does she therefore believe that, as we
approach leaving the European Union, it is much more
important and pressing that Scotland now has some sort of
bespoke immigration system, in order to deal with the
challenges we face as a nation?
-
I completely concur—I will come on to that point later in
my speech. Population growth is a vital contributor to a
more dynamic society, and it is crucial if we are to ensure
our economy is fit for the challenges of the future. With
an ageing population, Scotland will undergo a significant
demographic shift in the coming decades, which will present
us with challenges that we must be prepared for.
The Scottish Government want to address Scotland’s changing
demography through population growth, which will provide a
larger tax base to pay for services, as well as ensure that
we have more people to carry out essential jobs.
Immigration policy obviously plays a huge part in that. As
we have heard again and again today, EU and international
citizens play a crucial role in making Scotland’s economy
successful. They and the contribution they make to our
society are valued. It is utterly shameful that the UK
Government have failed to guarantee the rights of EU
citizens to remain in the UK almost a year on from the
Brexit referendum.
It cannot be repeated often enough how much we respect
those who have chosen to live and work in Scotland. In the
words of our First Minister:
“You’re not bargaining chips, you are human beings with
families, jobs, friends and lives here. I believe you have
a right to certainty and peace of mind.”
We have heard it already today, but let us just stop this
nonsense about speaking up for people who live abroad. Let
us take the first step today and tell EU nationals who are
living here that they are valued and that they can stay;
then we can move on, because it is just going to be
repeated again and again. We need action from the
Government now before the issue causes any more distress to
families and damage to Scotland and across the UK. One
thing is abundantly clear: UK immigration policy is at odds
with the values of the Scottish people. It does not meet
our needs and the UK Government need to listen to those
legitimate concerns.
The Government’s response to the report is disappointing in
many ways. The report clearly sets out that, based on the
evidence we received, there is a case for further
consideration of sub-national migration powers for
Scotland. The report calls for closer co-operation between
the UK and Scottish Government on that. Simply put, the UK
Government must deliver an immigration system that meets
Scotland’s needs and they should allow Holyrood to have
more say. By insisting that the immigration system is
designed for the whole of the UK, the Government fail to
take into account that Scotland’s demographic needs are
different from those of other parts of the UK.
The UK Government remain absolutely committed to reducing
migration to the UK to tens of thousands, as we heard from
the hon. Member for Blaydon (Mr Anderson). Growth in our
population is crucial to the growth of our economy.
Scotland’s people, including those who have chosen to live
and work there, are key to our future prosperity and a
strong economy.
-
Mr Anderson
The hon. Lady is making a very powerful speech, as always,
but she is being too kind to the Government when she says
that the UK immigration system is designed to do that. The
Government’s UK immigration policy is for one thing and one
thing only: to try and knock back UKIP from their
right-wing backwoodsmen in their heartlands. That is what
it is about and nothing more.
-
The hon. Gentleman has made his point and I do not need to
reply; I am sure the Minister will have taken that point on
board.
I appreciate that in his response the Minister will
probably wish to highlight the fact that immigration policy
is not some population panacea. That is very true. In order
to grow the population, the Scottish Government are working
a combination of measures, including creating a fair and
inclusive jobs market that attracts the type of skilled
individuals we need, investing to create a supportive
business environment that attracts inward investment,
improving the education, skills and health of Scotland’s
population, and creating a fairer, more equal society
through the delivery of key public services. The UK
Government must acknowledge why immigration is essential in
that mix as a key driver of population growth. As we have
heard, the population of Scotland is projected to increase
by 7% between 2014 and 2039, and 90% of the increase over
the next ten years is projected to come from migration.
However, projections for the UK as a whole show 49% due to
migration. Scotland is different, and one immigration
policy for the whole of the UK is simply not workable.
The damage caused by a single UK-wide policy can perhaps be
seen in the withdrawal of the post-study work visa.
Initially a pilot scheme that worked for Scotland, which
was then rolled out across the UK, it was removed due to
concerns it was not working for the rest of Britain. In our
report, the Scottish Affairs Committee restated our call
for the UK Government to work constructively with the
Scottish Government to explore the possibility of
introducing a formal scheme to allow international higher
education students graduating from Scottish further and
higher education institutions to remain in Scotland and
contribute to economic activity for a defined period of
time, as set out in the Smith Commission report. It is
hugely disappointing that the Government do not intend to
reintroduce a general post-study work scheme for Scotland,
despite calls from across the political spectrum, our
universities and civic society in Scotland.
-
Universities Scotland’s website states very clearly that it
feels that the UK’s current student immigration policy is
detrimental to Scotland’s businesses and industry, as there
are high skills shortages across a number of sectors that
are not being met by UK and EU-domiciled people. What does
my hon. Friend make of that comment?
-
I am confounded by the fact that the Government are not
listening to those people. We heard that in all of our
Committee’s sessions, and we are now hearing it from all
universities and businesses. I am not sure why their pleas
are falling on deaf ears.
-
rose—
-
I am not going to take another intervention, because I am
aware that we have hit the time for the Front-Bench
spokesmen.
The Minister must surely realise that the trialling of the
new tier 4 scheme in universities in England will be seen
as a kick in the teeth for Scottish universities. It may
very well be that
“There was no agenda to limit those involved to
universities in any region of the UK”—[Official Report, 8
December 2016; Vol. 618, c. 182WH.]
but given the repeated and sustained calls from Scotland
for the reintroduction of the visa scheme, it is in poor
taste that the Government are acting in this manner.
I hope the Minister will take my points and those of other
hon. Members on board. It has been fantastic to have the
opportunity to debate the issues raised by the report. I
ask that the Government revisit their poor response to the
report and acknowledge that they have got this very wrong.
2.31 pm
-
Mr (Blaydon)
(Lab)
I thank the Scottish Affairs Committee for doing such a
thorough job. It did the job that we expect Select
Committees to do, and it did so very well. I thank everyone
who contributed to the debate for bringing to this place
the voice of what is happening on the ground. The hon.
Member for Argyll and Bute (Brendan O’Hara) talked about
the real-life stories of human beings and the effect that
policies will have on their lives. It is sad that the
Government’s response is so dull and negative, but it is
hardly unexpected because, as I have already said, the one
thing driving their approach to immigration is their desire
to get the numbers down below an imaginary figure of
100,000 a year. They have failed miserably to do so, but
they are continuing to plough that furrow.
We have to accept the reality that the different nations,
regions, countries and cities of the United Kingdom have
different immigration needs. The needs of the north of
Scotland are different from those of the central belt. I
recently visited the north of Scotland, and I was told
about the example of Walkers Shortbread. It has a factory
in Moray, where there is essentially no unemployment. As a
result, it buses two full coaches of EU nationals from
Inverness to work in its factory every day. If those
workers were not available, that factory could close. Can
we imagine Scotland without Walkers Shortbread?
This is not just about places like that. Last autumn, we
were told that there was a 14% reduction in the number of
EU immigrants available to work in East Anglia, because
they are worried about what will happen post-Brexit. If
that carries on, we could see crops rot in the fields of
East Anglia because of a lack of an available workforce.
The Government have to look again at that.
As hon. Members have said clearly, the Government also have
to look at the post-study work scheme. Sir Timothy O’Shea,
the principal and vice-chancellor of the University of
Edinburgh, said in evidence to the Committee that his
concern is that a world-class university such as Edinburgh
may no longer be able to compete with the best in the
world. That is a frightening scenario. We also heard from
other hon. Members about the impact on other universities
in Scotland and the fact that they have lost millions of
pounds as a result of the scheme’s closure. Let us be
realistic about the different needs that exist and address
them as adults, and not be driven by the fear of hard
right-wing ideologues.
-
I expect the hon. Gentleman will not be surprised to hear
that Universities Scotland considers the UK to have one of
the least competitive post-study work policies in the
English-speaking developed world.
-
Mr Anderson
I am not surprised at all. As I said, our immigration
policy, if it can be called a policy, is being driven by
people who make you wonder if they went to school, let
alone university—it is so ludicrously inadequate.
This time last year, we were being driven into a referendum
by the ludicrous nonsense that if we did not pull up the
Brexit drawbridge, 76 million Turks would flood into this
country. That was how ridiculous the debate got in this
country—the Conservative party is working within those
terms. We need realism, pragmatism and good old-fashioned
common sense to put in place an immigration system that
benefits everyone’s economic and social wellbeing, not the
narrow-minded view that all that matters is getting
immigration numbers down to tens of thousands, no matter
what harm is done to the economy, our public services and
the great people who have made their homes in this nation.
I suggest humbly to the Minister that working with the
Committee in an open and positive manner would be great way
to start.
There is one benefit to leaving the EU: we now have a
chance to shape our immigration policy ourselves for the
future. We can link it to an industrial strategy, with
proper training and apprenticeship schemes, but that will
be much harder to do if we carry on with the lunacy that
the Conservative party is putting forward. It will not give
guarantees to the millions of EU nationals living in the UK
and Scotland. We need to understand the vital role they
play in Scottish society. Some 80% of EU nationals in
Scotland are of working age, compared with 65% of the
overall population, and 20,000 EU nationals work in
accommodation and food services. We were told last week in
the Chamber that that is the fastest-growing industry in
Scotland. The health and social work sector employs 12,000
EU nationals, and a fifth of EU nationals working in
Scotland are managers, directors, senior officials or in
other professional occupations. We can ill afford to lose
those people, so it is time to stop playing political
football with them. It is wrong to do so.
The Minister intervened on the hon. Member for Argyll and
Bute and asked him whether he is prepared to give a
unilateral guarantee to EU nationals here if the British
people living in Europe are not allowed to stay. I want to
put it the other way round. What is the Government’s
policy? If the EU says to us when we reach the end of the
negotiations, “We are not prepared to give UK nationals
living in Europe the right to stay,” what are they going to
say to the EU nationals in this country? They have a right
to know that. If the Government were to say, “We might
throw you out,” or even, “We will throw you out”, although
I do not want to hear that and nor does anybody else in
this Chamber, at least that would be fair to those people
and would enable them to plan their lives. But if they say,
“If they call our bluff, we will throw you out anyway,” it
is not a bluff worth having. The Government need to come
clean.
Beyond all that, this is a moral issue. It is about human
beings, and it is completely and utterly wrong that they
are being used as bargaining chips. People have come here
and contributed to society, and they deserve the decency
and respect that they have earned. We should be good to
them, and we should tell them now, “Yes, you are stopping
here, in the same way as everyone else is.”
A smaller but equally important part of the debate, which
the hon. Member for Perth and North Perthshire (Pete
Wishart) touched on, is life expectancy. He went through
the stats. It is worrying that Scottish male life
expectancy is lower than that of people in England. It is
even worse when compared with the UK average. That is
something that none of us can be proud of, and we have to
work at it together. It is even worse when we dig down into
the figures. It is bad enough that life expectancy is
lower, but those living in deprived communities are 40%
more likely to die from a stroke than those living in the
least deprived areas. Amazingly, people living in the most
deprived areas are 98% more likely to die from cancer than
those living in the least deprived areas. I am not saying
that to point out that it is bleak, but it is a moral issue
for all of us to tackle. We need to get to the bottom of it
collectively and do all we can to right that wrong.
The report suggests that the Government should work with
the Scottish Government to ensure that we use the new
welfare powers that have been given to the Scottish
Government in an innovative way. I am glad those powers
have gone to Scotland, and I would like to see them used to
relieve the pressure on the people of Scotland. There is a
continual attack not only on those at the vulnerable end
but on those right across society who are affected by the
benefit changes. I hope that the Scottish Parliament will
take new powers and use the ones it already has in a way
that achieves that. I hope that the Scottish Government
will do exactly what is indicated in the concluding
sentence of the Government response to the report, so that
we can “look forward” to the use of “substantial new
powers” for the benefit of all in Scotland, but in
particular those most in need.
2.40 pm
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The Minister for Immigration (Mr Robert Goodwill)
I join everyone in wishing the hon. Member for Perth and
North Perthshire (Pete Wishart) a very happy birthday. I am
informed by my Parliamentary Private Secretary that the
hon. Gentleman’s birthday is shared by our former
colleague, , famed for having
one more brain than the rest of us.
I, too, want Scotland to continue to be a prosperous nation
whose citizens are able to take full advantage of the
opportunities available to them. I disagree with the
Scottish National party in that I see Scotland’s future
sustainability coming as part of the United Kingdom. We
have heard several references to Brexit—I will come on to
that issue—but, to be clear, for the time being the most
important Union for Scotland is the one with England and
the rest of the United Kingdom.
Being part of the UK single market presents tremendous
social and economic opportunities for people and businesses
in Scotland, as it does for us all throughout the UK. The
lack of internal borders means absolute freedom for people
and goods to move between Scotland and the rest of the UK,
so there is a steady turnover of people moving to and from
Scotland. The Scottish Government’s own global connections
survey shows that the rest of the UK continues to be
Scotland’s largest market for exports. Scotland’s exports
to the rest of the UK are four times greater than those to
the European Union.
I fully accept that Scotland needs immigration to continue
to prosper, and I recognise the great contribution that
generations of migrants from other parts of the UK and from
beyond the UK have made to the socioeconomic wellbeing of
Scotland. For our part, the UK Government remain committed
to working with the Scottish Government on specific issues
and on areas of common concern to harness the resources and
talent available to encourage and support those who can
contribute to the future vitality of our nation.
Migration is a reserved issue. We will, however, work
closely with the Scottish Government as we develop future
arrangements, and I welcome the recent publication of their
paper “Scotland’s Place in Europe”, which has already been
discussed at the joint ministerial committee on EU
negotiations and is the subject of intense engagement
between officials from both Administrations. The truth is
this: people will migrate to Scotland if the conditions are
right and there are good job opportunities.
The Scottish Government now have significant policy levers
to shape and secure their economy. They have the power to
make Scotland the most competitive part of the UK, and to
encourage and support more people to move to Scotland from
other parts of the UK, the EU or, indeed, the rest of the
world. They have levers for economic development and
support for enterprise, for education and workforce
training, for health and social care, and for digital
connectivity and transport.
In addition, the Scottish Parliament has recently taken on
new tax-raising powers, which have the potential to be used
to make Scotland more competitive and a more attractive
place to live—or, potentially, the opposite. I do not agree
with how such powers are being used at the moment, but that
is a matter for the Scottish Government. That is what
devolution is all about.
We have heard repeatedly about the needs of the Scottish
economy. For non-EU migrants, there is already a
Scotland-only shortage occupation list for tier 2 of the
points-based system, which is specifically designed to
reflect any skilled labour market needs that are peculiar
to Scotland. The independent Migration Advisory Committee
consults extensively with employers and other organisations
in Scotland when recommending changes to the Scotland-only
shortage occupation list.
For the most part, since its introduction in 2007, the
Scottish list has matched the UK-wide shortage occupation
list. I therefore ask the SNP, where is the evidence that
Scotland has a different set of needs from the rest of the
UK? However inconvenient it is for the SNP, the evidence
shows that Scotland’s skills needs are largely aligned with
those of the rest of the UK.
I have a question for those who deem the existing levels of
migration in Scotland to be too low. Given the significant
powers that the Scottish Government have at their disposal
and the high levels of migration we continue to experience
in the UK, why is Scotland not attracting a higher share of
migrants than other parts of the UK?
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Will the Minister go on to outline exactly why Canada and
Australia can have differential immigration policies, but
not Scotland?
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Mr Goodwill
The evidence from the past about post-study opportunities
is that large numbers of people participating in such
schemes moved south to England. There is not evidence that
those people would stay put. Where is the evidence to
support the need for a differentiated migration policy for
Scotland?
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Will the Minister give way?
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Mr Goodwill
I will make some progress, if I may. On post-study work
visas, which I suspect are the issue to which the hon. Lady
was referring, the Government’s position has been set out
clearly in evidence to the Scottish Affairs Committee and
in Parliament, most recently in a debate on the topic in
this Chamber on 8 December. For the reasons I set out in
that debate, the Government do not intend to reintroduce a
general post-study work scheme for Scotland.
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For clarity, will the Minister name one body or
organisation, whether in Scotland or in the United Kingdom,
that supports the UK Government position on a post-study
work scheme? Everyone I know, everyone I speak to and
everyone I have heard from wants one for Scotland. Will he
name one organisation in Scotland that supports him on
that?
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Mr Goodwill
There are good opportunities for people who graduate in the
UK to go on to graduate-level jobs, but we will not return
to a situation in which people who get degrees here go into
low-skilled occupations. That is not what the scheme should
have been about. As I have noted, the United Kingdom has an
excellent and competitive offer to international students,
and there is no limit to the number of international
graduates of UK universities who may move into skilled
work.
The hon. Member for Perth and North Perthshire mentioned
the tier 4 pilot. The four universities chosen for the
pilot were selected objectively because they had the lowest
visa refusal rate. There was no agenda to limit the
universities involved to any particular part of the United
Kingdom. If the pilot is successful, however, it will be
rolled out more widely, including, potentially, to
universities in Scotland.
The status of EU nationals living in Scotland and in the UK
as a whole—the hon. Member for Dundee West (Chris Law) made
a point about that—is an important issue for the
Government. That is why the Prime Minister has made it one
of her top 12 priorities for negotiation with the EU. There
has, however, been no change to the rights and status of EU
nationals in the UK, or of British citizens in the EU, as a
result of the referendum. While the UK remains in the EU,
EU nationals here and UK nationals in other EU countries
continue to have the same rights and status, and are
subject to the same residence requirements under EU law, as
was the case before the referendum.
Incidentally, we welcome the most recently published
figures showing a fall in net migration of about 50,000. It
is interesting to note that the numbers of those coming
from Romania and Bulgaria increased. Many of them would
have been fruit-pickers and others so vital to our
agricultural industry. It is encouraging that those numbers
increased in the quarter after the Brexit vote.
As the Prime Minister said, it remains an important
priority for the UK, and for many other member states, to
resolve the challenge of the status of EU nationals as soon
as possible. However, the fact remains that there also
needs to be an agreement with the EU to ensure the fair
treatment of British citizens living in other member
states, including those from Scotland.
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Why is the Minister so reticent about guaranteeing EU
nationals leave to remain in the UK? Would that not be a
sensible step? Let us take the first step, because we would
probably then find that the 27 other EU member states
followed, saying, “That’s great, you’re taking the first
step to guarantee our nationals leave to remain, so we’ll
do the same.” The reason we have the impasse is that the UK
will not do that.
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Mr Goodwill
With respect to the hon. Lady, it was not the UK Government
that showed reticence; the other EU member states refused
to engage in purposeful and fruitful negotiation ahead of
the triggering of article 50. We were keen to get that item
resolved as soon as possible. For probably the only time,
on that point I will have to agree with the right hon.
Member for Gordon (Alex Salmond) and take a leaf out of his
book, because last week he confirmed that he did not think
EU nationals’ status in the UK would be jeopardised.
I will now make one or two remarks in response to points
made in the debate, but I will leave enough time for the
hon. Member for Perth and North Perthshire, who initiated
the debate, to make some comments at the end. The hon.
Member for Dundee West talked about the permanent residency
form. The form covers several different scenarios, not all
of which will be relevant to a particular applicant. The
average applicant does not need to complete anywhere near
85 pages—about 25 pages is the average. There is a new
online application process, which is straightforward for
applicants to use and means that they can complete the form
in about 15 or 20 minutes. Indeed, the online form
leapfrogs ahead if sections of it are irrelevant. We have
introduced a system so that documents such as passports can
be validated by local councils rather than having to be
sent off as part of that process.
The hon. Member for Rutherglen and Hamilton West (Margaret
Ferrier) made a point about student numbers. I make it
clear that we remain committed to attracting the brightest
and best graduates to the UK. They help make our education
system one of the best of the world and return to use that
education for the benefit of their own country. I repeat
that there is no limit on the number of international
students who can come to the UK.
The hon. Member for Blaydon (Mr Anderson) referred to some
of the points made during the referendum campaign. Indeed,
I think he almost abused the intelligence of those who
voted to leave the European Union. I respectfully point out
that in the Gateshead borough, 58,529 people voted to leave
the European Union and 44,492 voted to remain. In his area
a clear majority of people wanted to leave the European
Union. I for one—despite having been on the remain side—am
pleased to follow the instructions given to me by the
British people.
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Mr Anderson
I am aware of the figures. Like the Minister, I was on the
remain side. I was disappointed by the figures, but I am
aware of the reality and I am working to make the best job
of this. The problem with what the Government are doing is
that the narrow aim of getting immigration down to 100,000
a year or less is the only thing driving their immigration
policy, not the impact on the economy, on social services
or on real people’s lives. That is what is insulting our
intelligence, and the intelligence of the Scottish people.
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Mr Goodwill
Immigration was a key part of the referendum debate. Where
we can control numbers—those coming to the UK from outside
the European Union—we have seen falls. The Brexit
negotiations give us an opportunity to control the numbers
that come in in a way we have not been able to before.
However, we will be committed to the needs of the UK
economy and ensuring that we get the best possible deal.
A number of colleagues talked about the post-study visa
scheme—indeed, the hon. Gentleman mentioned it. We remain
committed to attracting the brightest and best graduates to
the UK. However, the post-study provisions we have in place
must strike a careful balance between providing competitive
options for the brightest graduates from around the globe
and maintaining standards against the type of widespread
abuse that was seen in the previous Government’s post-study
work scheme. Such abuse undermined our work routes and
damaged the reputation of our education system. The
Government welcome international students who choose to
study in Scotland and are pleased to note that visa
applications from international students to study at
Scottish universities have increased by 10% since 2010. The
most recent figures, for the year ending June 2016, showed
a continued year-on-year increase. With our current
post-study provisions, the number of international students
switching from tier 4 to tier 2 has increased. In 2015,
about 6,000 international students switched from tier 4 to
tier 2 from within the UK, up from about 5,500 grants in
2014 and about 4,000 in 2013. Unlike those on the former
post-study work schemes, those students will all move into
skilled employment with employers, who have appropriate
sponsorship duties placed on them.
I will conclude to leave a few moments for the hon. Member
for Perth and North Perthshire. As the Government continue
to develop their negotiating strategy for leaving the EU,
we will work closely with the Scottish Government and other
devolved Administrations to get the best possible deal for
all parts of the United Kingdom. We are considering the
options for our future immigration system carefully. As
part of that, it is important that we understand the
impacts of different options on different sectors of the
economy and the labour market around the UK.
Access to the UK’s single market presents tremendous social
and economic opportunities for people and businesses in
Scotland. The people of Scotland understood that when they
were asked to vote in their own referendum. As I said
earlier, I want Scotland to continue to be a prosperous
nation, but I see Scotland’s future sustainability coming
as part of the United Kingdom. I am grateful to the
Scottish Affairs Committee for its work on this issue, and
we will work closely with the Scottish Government as we
move forward.
2.54 pm
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I am grateful to the Minister for leaving me a few minutes to
sum up what has been an important and informative debate.
First, I thank my colleagues from the Scottish Affairs
Committee, my hon. Friends the Members for Dundee West (Chris
Law), for Rutherglen and Hamilton West (Margaret Ferrier) and
for Edinburgh North and Leith (Deidre Brock), for
contributing to the debate. I thank my hon. Friend the Member
for Argyll and Bute (Brendan O'Hara) for contributing, too,
as well as the hon. Member for Blaydon (Mr Anderson) and the
Minister.
I could have written that Government response. We saw it with
the woeful response we had to our report, which was an
in-depth look at the demographic requirements and population
needs of Scotland. We hear this again and again—it always
seems to boil down to the same thing. We raise lots of
important issues and facts, and we sit and take evidence
across Scotland, going to places such as the Isle of Skye,
and people tell us clearly that we have particular issues
when it comes to the demographic quality of our community and
society. They ask us as a Committee and as Members of
Parliament to take that issue forward, to do a report and to
look at what we could do to resolve these problems and give
Scotland some sort of chance to address them properly. We
bring them to the Minister and the Minister says, “We’re not
interested. All we are interested in is a one-size-fits-all
UK immigration policy right across the United Kingdom.”
That is a singular failure to take into account the specific
requirements and difficult challenges we have. We are left in
a dreadful situation by the Minister. We are leaving the
European Union against our national collective will. We
wanted nothing whatever to do with that. Only one Member of
Parliament was returned from Scotland with a pledge to have a
referendum on the European Union. We voted against that
referendum when it came to Parliament. Our nation voted to
remain in the European Union. We put forward the solution
that would spare us the worst of the madness by keeping us in
the single market, which is just about to be rejected by the
Government. Again and again, they give us no opportunity and
no hope to try to address the real issues, problems and
concerns that we consistently raise.
I do not know what a single UK immigration policy is. I do
not think even the Minister knows what a single immigration
policy is as we approach Brexit. I thought it was going to be
a points-based system, but the UK Independence Party’s
points-based system is actually too liberal for the
Government, so they are looking to design something else. He
talks about a single UK immigration policy, but I would like
to know what that looks like. I suspect and suggest that he
does not even know that himself—and he is only the
Immigration Minister, bless him.
We need to say that there is something going on within our
United Kingdom; something is singularly not working. A part
of the United Kingdom has emerged, the nation of Scotland,
which has a whole different history, culture and approach to
issues of immigration and emigration, and that requires to be
addressed. There is a particular difficulty with the quality
of our demography, our ageing population and the shrinking of
our working-age population, and that needs to be looked at
and needs solutions. If the Government are not prepared to do
that for Scotland—I sense they are not, because we keep
bringing it to them and they keep on saying no and, to a
certain extent, “Just get stuffed”—they must devolve
responsibility to the Scottish Government, who are prepared
to do the work. If the Minister sits complacently, just
telling us that we have to go along with what the UK
Government decide, that is not good enough. He must devolve
these policy areas to the Scottish Government so that we can
do the critical work required to address the issues
identified in the report.
The requirements, problems and challenges are many, and they
are manifest. If we do not start to challenge and address
them, Scotland will be economically disadvantaged. We cannot
proceed with a population gap to the rest of the United
Kingdom, and we cannot proceed with a dependency ratio that
is out of kilter with the rest of the UK. If we try to do
that, there will be a cost to our economy and our community,
and that will have an impact on every single constituency in
Scotland.
England is different. We accept that. We know there is
something particular going on when it comes to immigration in
England that requires a different type of solution. However,
the situation for England practically works against the
interests of the nation of Scotland. That is why we require a
different immigration solution. We require the powers to
attack and challenge the issues we are confronted with.
If the Minister is not prepared to work with us in order to
do that, he has to devolve the powers to us now. He has to
give us the opportunity to address them, because if he does
not there will be real issues and problems for Scotland’s
economy. We have a way to deal with that if the Minister does
not do it: we are at 50% for independence today—what a place
to start for a new independence campaign. If he will not
listen and will singularly, defiantly refuse to give us the
powers, we will take them in a referendum of the Scottish
people. Then we will get the powers, and then we will make
progress.
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