Immigrants Take 4 Jobs for Every 1 That Goes to a Briton

Daily Stormer
August 15, 2014

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Unemployment has gone down, but only because the foreigners claiming benefits have been given the jobs.

The only way the mainstream can actually report this fact is if they try to hide the Non-White aspect of it and only talk about East Europeans. If they don’t do that, they will be accused of being racist. But the fact is that there is just as much, if not more immigration from outside the EU, as there is from inside it. In the end, when you look at it economically, no matter where they come from, they are still depriving the British people of those jobs and making sure the employers will never have to pay a decent wage at the same time.

Daily Mail:

Unemployment fell by 132,000 over the past three months – but for every British worker who found a job, four immigrants also secured work.

The overall jobless count has now fallen by 437,000 in a single year, a major boost for the Government.

However, the figures also offer clear evidence of how a new wave of EU immigration has arrived to take advantage of the fast-recovering economy which has produced an extra two million private sector jobs since 2010.

The figures also showed that wages were almost stagnant, with pay levels actually falling by 0.2 per cent over the year when bonuses were included.

Without taking bonuses into account, pay levels went up by just 0.6 per cent.

Some Tory MPs blamed stagnant wage on the increasing competition for jobs from newly-arrived Eastern Europeans.

This belief was strengthened by a Bank of England report which said pay is largely being depressed at the lower end of the scale.

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Unemployment is highest in the North East of England and lowest in the South East around London, signalling a continuing north-south jobs divide.

The unemployment total now stands at 2.08million, and the unemployment rate, which measures joblessness among those who want to work, fell to 6.4 per cent between April and June, down from 7.8 per cent a year earlier.

Numbers of people out of work and not looking for jobs – the economically inactive – were down 130,000 in a year.

Work and Pensions Secretary Iain Duncan Smith said: ‘In the past, many people in our society were written off and trapped in unemployment and welfare dependency.

‘But through our welfare reforms, we are helping people to break that cycle.’

However, it will concern Ministers that those new jobs which have been created have been going disproportionately to immigrants, mainly from the EU.

For the first time the number of immigrants from Poland and other Eastern European countries in work here has passed the million mark, and since last autumn foreign-born workers have been finding jobs faster than the British-born.

Over the past nine months seven out of every ten newly-available jobs thrown up by the recovering economy have been taken by workers who were born abroad – considered in official counts as immigrants.

The rate at which immigrants have been moving into new jobs has been accelerating over the first half of the summer, according to the Office for National Statistics.

Between April and June, foreign-born workers took more than four new jobs for every one taken by a British-born worker.

The figures are based on the Labour Force Survey. Department for Work and Pensions officials admitted part of the most recent increase for foreign-born workers may be misleading because figures have not been seasonally adjusted.

But the clear evidence of a resurgence of Eastern European immigration provoked a barrage of fresh demands for curbs on the EU’s free movement rules.

Tory MPs pressed David Cameron to toughen his stance in renegotiating Britain’s relationship with the EU.

There were 861,000 workers employed in Britain from Poland and the seven other Eastern European countries that joined the EU in 2004, up 182,000 in nine months.

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The huge influx of foreign workers willing to work for peanuts has kept the wages unrealistically low.