首页
外语
计算机
考研
公务员
职业资格
财经
工程
司法
医学
专升本
自考
实用职业技能
登录
外语
Those setting migration policy in rich countries face an almost impossible task. The demands of demography and economics—shrinki
Those setting migration policy in rich countries face an almost impossible task. The demands of demography and economics—shrinki
admin
2017-04-20
34
问题
Those setting migration policy in rich countries face an almost impossible task. The demands of demography and economics—shrinking and ageing workforces, a growing shortage of people to fill jobs requiring both high and low skills, and increasingly flexible and open economies—all point to more migration. On the other hand, voters in many rich countries seem increasingly hostile to immigration, which suggests that politicians may find it more and more difficult to allow immigration to continue at its current high level.
If only there were some means of getting all the benefits of migration but none of the costs. That is the thinking behind the latest solution now being promoted: circular migration. Europe’s commissioner for justice and home affairs, Franco Frattini, wants to see more temporary migrants in the E. U. For the highly skilled, he suggests a blue card (similar to America’s green one) to ease the temporary entry of professionals and their families into Europe. Foreign workers with the most skills make up just 1.7% of the workforce, about half the rate in America and far less than in Canada or Australia, and competition for them is getting more intense as some of the brightest head to Asia. A blue card would at least make it clear to migrant professionals that they would be welcome. On the other hand, highly skilled workers go in search of dynamic economies, along with the high pay and bright careers they offer, and a blue card would do nothing to bring more dynamism to Europe.
What of the less skilled? Mr Frattini points to a pilot project in Spain over the past two years in which Moroccans—especially women—have been brought in to do specific jobs on farms and in hotels for a few months at a time and then sent home again. Contracts are drawn up beforehand, travel is part-funded by the E. U., everything is above board, and so far every migrant has gone back as agreed. As a result, 10,000 Moroccan workers did not have to run the risk of taking a patera across the Strait of Gibraltar. They were able to send remittances home but put no strain on Spain’s public services. If the projects work, Mr. Frattini would like to scale them up, with member countries eventually setting import quotas for foreign labour.
But this part of what Mr Frattini and others call circular migration has been tried before and seems unlikely to bring the hoped-for benefits. Germany’s Gastarbeiter scheme began in 1955, drawing workers first from southern Europe and north Africa and then Turkey. Something similar was done in France and the Netherlands
The trouble is that such a dirigiste design is not well suited to today’s liberal democracies and their flexible labour markets. And unless schemes are tightly regulated and the exit of workers is enforced by law, everybody has an interest in keeping the supposedly temporary workers in place. Employers would much prefer not to have to train new people every six months, and workers want to keep their jobs or move on to better ones. Many of the guest workers who arrived in northern Europe from Turkey and north Africa in the 1960s and 1970s never left, and eventually brought their families to live with them too. The old joke that there is nothing so permanent as a temporary migrant has more than a grain of truth in it.
It might be possible to create financial incentives for migrants to leave at the end of their contract period. Co-operation between the governments of the host and the sending countries would be essential, says Mr. Frattini. And migrants could be policed more tightly with the aid of new technology: ID cards, databases with biometric details, systems like E-verify in America that allow employers to check whether workers are authorised to be in the country. Proponents of circular migration admit that it would entail a loss of privacy.
The biggest problem, though, is that people who expect to be packed off home after six months will be seen as second-class residents, and will have less incentive to integrate with their hosts. Why learn the language or adopt local habits and values for just a few months? Locals, for their part, are likely to view temporary labourers with the same sort of hostility as longer-term immigrants.
Yet any sort of circular migration brings challenges of integration. Faster movements of people, combined with technology—cable television piping entertainment from the sending country, cheap phone and video calls back home—slow the rate at which migrants adopt their host country’s language, values and identity. Migration, suggests Mr. Moudden in Rabat, "is changing our whole understanding of citizenship, of the nation".
The author seems to suggest that the E. U. blue card scheme will________.
选项
A、diminish economic dynamism
B、increase reliance on foreign workers
C、have a limited effect
D、be a solution to migration problem
答案
C
解析
推断题。第二段末句提到,高技术工人寻求的是充满活力的经济体以及随之而来的高收入和职业前景,然而“蓝卡”并不能为欧洲经济带来更多活力,言外之意,欧洲的“蓝卡”计划并不能从根本上解决问题,故答案为[C],同时排除[A]和[D];文中没有谈及“蓝卡”和对外来工人的依赖程度有何关系,[B]属于过度推断,故排除。
转载请注明原文地址:https://jikaoti.com/ti/CteMFFFM
0
专业英语八级
相关试题推荐
BillGates,thenstillMicrosoft’sboss,wasnearlyrightin2004whenhepredictedtheendofspamintwoyears.Thankstoclev
CharacterAnalysisofShakespeareanPlaysI.Characteranalysis—characterevaluationasthebestwaytostarttheanalysisof
Whatdoesthenewsitemmainlytalkabout?
TeachingEnglishthroughChildren’sLiteratureI.Acase:charactersinchildren’sliterature【B1】______themlearn【B1】______Eng
TeachingEnglishthroughChildren’sLiteratureI.Acase:charactersinchildren’sliterature【B1】______themlearn【B1】______Eng
What’sthenewsitemmainlyabout?
CableTVhasexperiencedtremendousgrowthasanadvertisingmediumbecauseithassomeimportantadvantages.Aprimaryoneis
CableTVhasexperiencedtremendousgrowthasanadvertisingmediumbecauseithassomeimportantadvantages.Aprimaryoneis
PASSAGEFOURIntheletterlyingonatable,whatdidtheladywrite?
随机试题
无尿
胃纳不佳及阴虚体弱者慎服的是
A.消化液的急性丢失,如大量呕吐、腹泻、肠瘘等B.胃肠道消化液长期持续丧失,如反复呕吐、腹泻、胆胰瘘、胃肠道长期吸引或慢性肠梗阻,钠随消化液大量丧失,补液不足或仅补充水分C.急、慢性肾功能衰竭伴少尿或无尿D.维生素D缺乏、甲状旁腺机能减退、慢性肾功能
女性,38岁,反复上腹痛伴反酸10多年,近来疼痛加剧,服抗酸药等不能缓解。近1周来上腹痛伴呕吐,呕吐量有时较大,呕吐物带有发酵味,查体:上腹部压痛,有振水音。上述病例最可能的诊断是
某单位为了企业解困经当地政府批准在无偿划拨的土地上建设网点房3000m2用于经营,2002年12月31日开始使用,6个月后将其中的2000m2出租,1000m2出售。并将出租部分向银行抵押贷款280万元,贷款期限2年,抵押率70%。2005年6月30日由于
根据《企业所得税法》的规定,在计算企业所得税应纳税所得额时,不计入收入总额的是()。
下列各项中,属于证券资产特点的有()。
在△ABC中,=()。
人生是______的,一个有着热烈的、慷慨的、天性多情的人,也许容易受他的比较聪明的同伴之愚。那些天性慷慨的人,常常因慷慨而错了主意,常常因对付仇敌过于宽大,或对于朋友过于______,而走了失着。依次填入画横线部分最恰当的一项是()。
设A是n阶矩阵,证明:(Ⅰ)r(A)=1的充分必要条件是存在n阶非零列向量α,β,使得A=αβT;(Ⅱ)r(A)=1且tr(A)≠0,证明A可相似对角化.
最新回复
(
0
)