• Publish Your article
  • Editorial Policy
  • Contact
  • Advertise
Monday, May 12, 2025
No Result
View All Result
UK Herald
  • Home
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Entertainment
    • All
    • Sports
    England rugby stadium Twickenham given new name after more than 100 years in shock new deal

    England rugby stadium Twickenham given new name after more than 100 years in shock new deal

    Peter Morgan dead at 65: Former Wales and Lions rugby star who became a politician passes away as club pays tribute

    Peter Morgan dead at 65: Former Wales and Lions rugby star who became a politician passes away as club pays tribute

    Horse racing tips: Unexposed Group 1 contender can stun the big guns at 14-1

    Horse racing tips: Unexposed Group 1 contender can stun the big guns at 14-1

    Woman ‘raped seven times by two French rugby stars who left her riddled with bite marks & with horror injuries’

    Woman ‘raped seven times by two French rugby stars who left her riddled with bite marks & with horror injuries’

    Horse racing tips: Gary Moore’s charge can gain revenge after falling last time out

    Horse racing tips: Gary Moore’s charge can gain revenge after falling last time out

    Ian Buckett dead at 56: Former Wales rugby star who was ‘admired and feared equally’ dies as tributes pour in

    Ian Buckett dead at 56: Former Wales rugby star who was ‘admired and feared equally’ dies as tributes pour in

    Horse racing tips: Bash the bookies with these longshots including 9-1 fancy

    Horse racing tips: Bash the bookies with these longshots including 9-1 fancy

    Shayne Philpott dead at 58 – New Zealand All Blacks rugby legend dies after suffering ‘medical event’

    Shayne Philpott dead at 58 – New Zealand All Blacks rugby legend dies after suffering ‘medical event’

    Horse racing tips: This 7-1 chance appears to have been laid out for race he won last year

    Horse racing tips: This 7-1 chance appears to have been laid out for race he won last year

  • Lifestyle
    • All
    • Fashion
    • food
    • Health
    • Travel
    The ‘underappreciated’ Caribbean island that mass tourism hasn’t ruined yet

    The ‘underappreciated’ Caribbean island that mass tourism hasn’t ruined yet

    Travellers are ‘cheating’ expensive fares to save 40% on train tickets

    Travellers are ‘cheating’ expensive fares to save 40% on train tickets

    The lesser-known Greek ‘floating village’ with return flights for just £100

    The lesser-known Greek ‘floating village’ with return flights for just £100

    Spanish ‘mini Maldives’ gets brand new TUI flight from UK airport

    Spanish ‘mini Maldives’ gets brand new TUI flight from UK airport

    Your rights if Spain and Portugal’s power outage has affected your flight

    Your rights if Spain and Portugal’s power outage has affected your flight

    Jet2 slashes £100 off trips to European ‘paradise’ after UK travel company folds

    Jet2 slashes £100 off trips to European ‘paradise’ after UK travel company folds

    I bought the ‘secret’ rail ticket that’s the cheapest in the UK — and it was just 10p

    I bought the ‘secret’ rail ticket that’s the cheapest in the UK — and it was just 10p

    British Airways launches new direct flight route to ‘stunning’ Italian coastal city

    British Airways launches new direct flight route to ‘stunning’ Italian coastal city

    UK city introduces new £5 ticket system on buses and trams

    UK city introduces new £5 ticket system on buses and trams

    The Maldives beach phenomenon known as the ‘Sea of Stars’ — and for good reason

    The Maldives beach phenomenon known as the ‘Sea of Stars’ — and for good reason

    Trending Tags

    • Golden Globes
    • Mr. Robot
    • MotoGP 2017
    • Climate Change
    • Flat Earth
  • Health
  • Opinion
  • Science
  • Tech
  • Crypto
  • Travel
  • Real Estate
  • Sports
  • More
    • Press Release
UK Herald
No Result
View All Result

The evidence speaks for itself: a UK-EU youth mobility scheme is common sense — and popular

by Justin Marsh
October 2, 2024
0
0
SHARES
1
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on TwitterReddit


Youth mobility schemes have been hitting the headlines again, with politicians and commentators taking us on a rollercoaster of whether the UK and the EU will or won’t seal the deal. The briefing tussle has seen the proposed scheme liberally compared to everything from ‘a return to freedom of movement’ (it isn’t) right through to ‘taking a gap year’ (it also isn’t). So let’s take a look at what youth mobility schemes actually are, and why they really, just maybe, aren’t something people should be getting so worried about.

Youth mobility schemes are agreements between governments which allow young people, usually in the age ranges of 18-30ish, to work and/or study abroad for a limited time. Usually, for 2 years. They are normally reciprocal — allowing young people from one country to go to the other one, and vice versa — and are almost always capped, often to a few thousand spaces per year.

Anyone interested in the scheme has to prove they have enough savings and wait for the government to approve their application. They also need to pay a fee just to apply, and, in the UK’s case, pay a hefty ‘health surcharge’ for every year spent  in the UK. Once in the UK, they can’t get any public funds, such as benefits, or bring any family members.

This is a far cry from buying a one way ticket from a budget airline and deciding you are never coming back, or relying on the bank of mum and dad for a year while you figure out what you want to do with your life. While offering no route to residency or citizenship, youth mobility schemes are a more formalised application to spend an extended period of time working, studying and living abroad, than a mere short-term tourist visa.

And, they’re nothing new. The UK already has such agreements with 13 other countries including Australia, Canada, New Zealand and India. In Australia, the scheme is called a ‘working holiday scheme’, while in Canada, they call it an ‘international experience scheme’. The different naming conventions also hint at their purpose. These schemes are neither fully-fledged working visas, nor student visas. They sit right in between the two: allowing young people to gain new skills for a limited period, by being economically productive and immersing themselves in a different culture. We could even call ours a UK-EU cultural exchange scheme. The people that benefit from such schemes bring skills and experiences back home with them, and in the process, bring their home and host countries closer together. They are ideally suited to countries and blocs of countries seeking a closer relationship or a ‘relationship reset’.

The maximum number of annual visas granted also varies greatly; for 2024, our youth mobility scheme with Uruguay is capped at 500 people, while our scheme with Canada is capped at 8,000, and Australia a healthy 45,000 places.

The only thing that is new about youth mobility schemes, is the furore over a proposed EU-UK youth mobility scheme. Indeed, the original 2008 Canada-UK youth mobility scheme was expanded as recently as 2023, without much fanfare, when we agreed our UK-Canada Free Trade Agreement. Likewise, the Australia-UK and New Zealand-UK schemes also came into effect in 2023, under the then Sunak-led Conservative government, as part of our new post-Brexit trade deals with both countries. Furthermore, Sunak’s Conservative government was so keen on youth mobility schemes, that they even tried agreeing them with France, Germany and Spain. Shortly after that, long-time Brexiteer and former UKIP councillor turned former conservative minister George Eustice broke cover a year ago to help Sunak get the schemes off the ground.

So why is everyone getting so wound up with what seems to be an otherwise sensible opportunity-generating policy for young people?

Some suggest that it is an inherent fear of any policy including the words ‘movement’ and  ‘EU’, being misinterpreted as the UK government returning to ‘free movement’ with the EU. So does anyone know what the public thinks about them? Yes we do. In fact, we (collectively) know lots.  Our own polling from March this year found that three in five (59%) think the UK should negotiate a youth mobility scheme with the EU, compared to just 15% who oppose the idea.

More recently, in August this year, More in Common found that a staggering 71% of people who voted Labour at the General Election in July supported the scheme, as well as a majority (56%) of Conservative voters. Reassuringly, even 44% of Reform UK voters support a youth mobility scheme — only 27% were against it. The policy is clearly quite popular.

Others have suggested that fear of the scheme may be due to the uncertainty surrounding how any UK-EU youth mobility scheme would impact net migration figures in the UK (god forbid they were to go up, right?). Ignoring for a second that it would be within the government’s gift to negotiate a cap, allowing them to control the number of people arriving in the UK, there may be an even bigger misconception at play: that more people would come to the UK than would leave it.

According to a recent investigation, the UK Home Office puts the total number of people who came to the UK across all 13 existing youth mobility schemes in 2023 at a mere 23,000 people. At the same time, publicly available data shows that more than 26,000 young Brits left the UK on the Australia scheme alone. Add to that the additional 8,000 Brits that left for New Zealand in the same time period and a clearer picture starts to emerge: current youth mobility schemes are bringing down net migration in the UK.

Even without data from the other countries with whom we have schemes in place, on the basis of the data from Australia alone, the numbers already show that worries about a reciprocal youth mobility deal with the EU on the grounds of net migration, could be misplaced.

Some might argue that Britain is more attractive to Europeans than to Australians or New Zealanders, but past migration figures show that when growth is stagnant e.g 1980 and 1981, and as it is now, thousands more people travelled to Europe from Britain than the other way around. And now that Europeans will be faced with costs and time limits to partake in a UK scheme when they can travel to 26 other member states for free and indefinitely, it is not unreasonable to assume that more British people will partake in a reciprocal youth mobility scheme than EU citizens.

EU and UK leaders are under similar pressures from their domestic audiences over economic growth and immigration, so when Keir Starmer and Ursula Von der Leyen meet today in Brussels, let’s hope the evidence speaks for itself.

Politics.co.uk is the UK’s leading digital-only political website. Subscribe to our daily newsletter for all the latest news and analysis.

The post The evidence speaks for itself: a UK-EU youth mobility scheme is common sense — and popular appeared first on Politics.co.uk.



Source link

Related Posts

Cross-party MPs brand voting system ‘dangerous’ in an era of electoral volatility

Cross-party MPs brand voting system ‘dangerous’ in an era of electoral volatility

by Justin Marsh
May 11, 2025
0

A major cross-party group of MPs has warned that the electoral system is “unrepresentative” and potentially “dangerous”, urging the government to back reform amid deepening disillusion with politics.  The All-Party Parliamentary Group...

Graeme Downie: ‘We must do more than raise awareness of Parkinson’s — we must act’

Graeme Downie: ‘We must do more than raise awareness of Parkinson’s — we must act’

by Justin Marsh
May 9, 2025
0

April was Parkinson’s Awareness Month and knowing how many people live with the disease, I found it shocking there has never been a full debate in the chamber on the issue. This...

PMQs verdict: Kemi Badenoch spurns opportunity to damage Starmer (again)

PMQs verdict: Kemi Badenoch spurns opportunity to damage Starmer (again)

by Justin Marsh
May 7, 2025
0

As the political landscape fractures and fragments, prime minister’s questions is fast becoming something of a curiosity. The two stars of the show, secured by their position opposite each other on the...

Who is Sarah Pochin, the new Reform UK MP?

Who is Sarah Pochin, the new Reform UK MP?

by Justin Marsh
May 5, 2025
0

Sarah Pochin is the Reform UK MP for Runcorn and Helsby, having won the seat in a by-election on 1 May 2025. She is the first female MP elected for Reform UK....

Week-in-Review: Reform plots reckoning for Keir Starmer — and irrelevance for Badenoch

Week-in-Review: Reform plots reckoning for Keir Starmer — and irrelevance for Badenoch

by Justin Marsh
May 3, 2025
0

The Runcorn and Helsby by-election will be seen as the moment Nigel Farage first made good on his totemic warning, issued at the commencement of his parliamentary career: “We’re coming for Labour”,...

What’s at stake in​ England​’s local ​elections​?

What’s at stake in​ England​’s local ​elections​?

by Justin Marsh
May 1, 2025
0

Voters across England are heading to the polls as Keir Starmer’s government readies for its first major interaction with the electorate since winning office in July last year. Labour is preparing for...

Next Post
Essential for Autumn Adventures—BottleBottle Keeps You Refreshed on Every Journey

Essential for Autumn Adventures—BottleBottle Keeps You Refreshed on Every Journey

Popular News

New York Times editor Joe Kahn defends publishing Trump story every half hour

New York Times editor Joe Kahn defends publishing Trump story every half hour

May 12, 2025
Cross-party MPs brand voting system ‘dangerous’ in an era of electoral volatility

Cross-party MPs brand voting system ‘dangerous’ in an era of electoral volatility

May 11, 2025

Top Nursing Dissertation Topics in the UK + Expert Help

May 11, 2025
‘It’s an Escape’: Ewan McGregor on the freedom of filmed with his best friend

‘It’s an Escape’: Ewan McGregor on the freedom of filmed with his best friend

May 10, 2025
The ‘underappreciated’ Caribbean island that mass tourism hasn’t ruined yet

The ‘underappreciated’ Caribbean island that mass tourism hasn’t ruined yet

May 10, 2025
Graeme Downie: ‘We must do more than raise awareness of Parkinson’s — we must act’

Graeme Downie: ‘We must do more than raise awareness of Parkinson’s — we must act’

May 9, 2025
PMQs verdict: Kemi Badenoch spurns opportunity to damage Starmer (again)

PMQs verdict: Kemi Badenoch spurns opportunity to damage Starmer (again)

May 7, 2025
UK Herald

All Rights Reserved © UK HERALD - The Voice of UK

Important Links

  • Publish Your article
  • Editorial Policy
  • Contact
  • Advertise

...

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Politics
  • UK News
  • Business
  • Science
  • National
  • Entertainment
  • Gaming
  • Sports
  • Fashion
  • Lifestyle
  • Travel
  • Health
  • Food

All Rights Reserved © UK HERALD - The Voice of UK