British workers are sidelined

UK companies are dependent on to cheap immigrant workers

July 31, 2024
UK firms addicted to cheap foreign labour

Thousands of Bangladeshis are not getting work even after a year after spending thirty thousand pounds in the name of a work permit and care visa in Britain. A lot of UK companies are using work permits and other work visa policies just to make millions of pounds by human trafficking in legal ways.

According to recent data, British businesses are increasingly relying on inexpensive immigrant labour to fill staff shortfalls.

According to the Centre for Migration Control, more than 70% of migrants who arrived in the UK last year do not earn enough to make a "positive economic contribution" to the country.

The think group confirmed to Daily Dazzling Dawn , foreign workers must earn more than £38,000 to "break-even".

However, the number of migrants who are a burden on taxpayers has risen over the last three years, with 55% earning less than £38,000 in 2022 and 51% in 2021.

But the number of migrants who are a burden to the taxpayer has increased over the past three years, with 55% earning less than £38,000 in 2022 and 51% in 2021.

Experts told the Daily Express this is down to the surge in foreign workers arriving in the UK on health and social care visas. Many feared this entry route was effectively a back door into the UK, with the sector still facing severe shortages despite an influx of workers on such visas.

Robert Bates, Research Director at the Centre for Migration Control, said: “These figures confirm that the UK’s current immigration system is a huge economic burden, admitting hundreds of thousands of individuals who earn far less than is needed for them to “break-even”.


“Those coming to the country should be only the very best and brightest. It is a privilege to live and work in Britain, and one that we should not be awarding to those who offer us no economic advantage.”

The Centre for Migration Control, through Freedom of Information requests, analysed the salaries of migrants issued with Certificates of Sponsorships – which are required to hire foreign workers.

In 2023, the Home Office issued 308,510 CoSs. But only 90,460 of these people earned more than £38,000.