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Süddeutsche Zeitung - Alemania | Miércoles, 25. Octubre 2006
Free movement of workers within Europe
Klaus Brill argues that restricting free movement of workers within Europe won't have much of an impact. "However, the situation is by no means the same everywhere, and this also applies to the countries of origin. For example, the number of Czechs leaving their home country has remained relatively small. Bavaria's minister for economic affairs, Erwin Huber, recently admitted that fears of an invasion of the Upper Palatinate had been 'greatly exaggerated'. In contrast, 170,000 Slovaks have left their country since 2004. 36,000 went to England, 15,000 to Ireland, but the majority, 75,000, came to the Czech Republic. Moreover, there are already around two million Romanians working in the 25 EU member states, and according to the government in Budapest's statistics, 1.3 million of them are legally employed.... These figures prove that migration within Europe is an unstoppable historical process driven by the disparities between East and West... Even now there are people from Belarus, Ukraine and even Vietnam living (often illegally) in the Czech Republic, many of whom are university graduates. In view of the poverty of their situation in their home countries, Europe's higher salaries act like a magnet. Rules and regulations won't do much to change this."
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