The government says it will end free movement, a key principle of the EU and impose immigration controls after Brexit. (File | Reuters) 
World

UK orders pre-Brexit study of European Union migrants' economic impact

More than 3 million citizens of other EU countries live in Britain, and many sectors of the economy rely on foreign workers.

From our online archive

LONDON: The British government today ordered an assessment of the contribution of European Union citizens to the economy, as the UK ponders how to structure its immigration system after leaving the bloc.

More than 3 million citizens of other EU countries live in Britain, and many sectors of the economy rely on foreign workers.

Home Secretary Amber Rudd said today that the government needs "the most accurate picture possible of the extent to which the UK economy uses EU labor." She has asked an independent group, the Migration Advisory Committee, to conduct the study.

The government says it will end free movement, a key principle of the EU and impose immigration controls after Brexit. But businesses say it is unclear exactly what will happen when Britain ceases to be an EU member in March 2019.

Britain Home Secretary Amber Rudd (AP)

"The UK must remain a hub for international talent," Rudd wrote in the Financial Times newspaper. "We must keep attracting the brightest and the best migrants from around the world."

Rudd said there would be no "cliff-edge" for the economy, suggesting a transition period. But Immigration Minister Brandon Lewis said Thursday that free movement will end in the spring of 2019.

Critics say the government has been tardy in calling the inquiry, which is not due to report until September 2018 six months before the Brexit deadline.

PM Modi talks to Iran's President Pezeshkian; backs dialogue, diplomacy in West Asia

Trump slams US Supreme Court ruling on birthright citizenship; calls it 'too bad for country'

An “ocean of opportunity” and of competition

India-Japan annual summit to focus on AI, mobility roadmap and maritime cooperation

Atleast 14 children killed as roof of tutoring centre collapse in eastern Pakistan

SCROLL FOR NEXT