Fury as Rachel Reeves’ youth migration deal blasted as ‘back door to free movement’ | Politics | News
Reform UK leader Nigel Farage has accused Rachel Reeves of opening โa back door to free movementโ over a potential migration deal with the EU. The Chancellor believes that Britain needs to sign an โambitiousโ migration deal with the bloc that would allow young people from Europe to live and work in Britain.
The move forms part of her plan to boost the economy and lessen the need for tax rises in the forthcoming budget. Reeves is under pressure to fill a ยฃ30 billion black hole in the nationโs finances and has called on the Office for Budget Responsibility (OBR) to include the benefits of the governmentโs Brexit reset in its upcoming forecast. The Chancellor hailed a youth mobility scheme which would allow young people from across Europe to live and work in the UK and vice versa, as something that would be โgood for the economy, good for growth and good for businessโ.
She told the Times: โWe want the OBR to score it. They scored it when we left the European Union. They should score both the improved trade relationships that weโve negotiated and this youth experience scheme.โ
The move to urge the OBR to include income from post-Brexit agreements would mean that the official forecaster would make more favourable assessments of the UKโs economic health ahead of the November 26 budget.
The OBR has previously suggested that Britainโs current GDP is around 4% lower than it would have been had it remained in the EU.
Research suggests that if net migration were to rise by 31,000 a year due to the mobility scheme, it would generate a GDP increase of 0.45% in ten years, equivalent to ยฃ5 billion a year.
Reeves added: โWe have agreed as a government that we want to have an ambitious youth experience scheme to allow young people in Britain to be able to go and work, to travel, to volunteer, to gain experience, to learn languages in European countries.
โAnd we want young people from those European countries to also be able to come to the UK and have the same opportunities that my generation had to travel and work and study in Europe.
โWe also want the OBR to score that because when we left the European Union, the OBR said that our economy would be 4% smaller as a result. As a result of that reset in May, we think the economy will be stronger.โ
However, Reform UK leader Nigel Farage has warned that such a scheme would โeffectively be a back door to free movementโ.
The Chancellor has so far failed to communicate how many people would be expected to arrive in the country if the scheme were introduced, but some estimates put the number as high as 50,000.
