• email article
  • print article
  • small text sizemedium text sizelarge text size
  • comment on this article

MEPs clear Blue Card scheme

The European Parliament gave the nod to the introduction of a Blue Card scheme in the EU enabling highly-skilled workers from non-EU countries to take up jobs in the 27-member bloc.

The scheme, modelled on the Green Card system in the US, received the approval of MEPs meeting in Strasbourg on Thursday. They approved a consultation report on the proposal.

Although the EP has no competence in the justice area, the MEPs argued that the introduction of this system was a step in the right direction to attract new skills to the EU.

Nationalist MEP Simon Busuttil backed the initiative but reiterated that an effective European policy on illegal immigration was a prerequisite for a policy on legal migration. This was the first time the EU was opening a window to legal migration, enabling non-EU workers to find a job in the bloc on the basis of a common European permit.

Dr Busuttil cautioned that the EU could not advance a credible policy on legal migration unless it first showed it could be effective on illegal immigration. "People cannot trust Europe on legal migration unless we demonstrate that we can act effectively on illegal immigration," he warned.

The introduction of the Blue Card had already been approved by EU Justice Ministers last month.

Although Malta backs the proposal, the island will not be obliged to adopt it because allowing immigrants into its territory remains its sole prerogative.

Through the new system, professionals from non-EU countries would be allowed to live and work in the EU under certain conditions. They have to be highly skilled and earn 150 per cent of the gross average salary in the country they want to enter. Professionals who receive a Blue Card are entitled to family reunification.

Foreign highly-skilled workers make up 1.72 per cent of migrant workers in the EU, against 9.9 per cent in Australia and 3.2 per cent in the US.

  • Google Bookmarks Del.icio.us Facebook Blogger YahooMyWeb Digg Reddit Stumbleupon
  • email article
  • print article
  • small text sizemedium text sizelarge text size
  • comment on this article

Comments

T Briffa (on 23/11/08)
I cannot understand Malta's reservations on this issue. We are not talking about unskilled non-eu workers populating our already overcrowded islands here. We are talking about professionals in fields where we suffer from a lack of manpower such as Health and IT. We cannot hope to keep on attracting and holding these professionals to Malta if we continue to make it difficult for them to stay and for their spouses to join them and live happily. Remember we are talking about educated, frequently cultured, persons here, whom it would enrich our islands to embrace.

Poll

Was the budget good for Malta?

  • yes
  • no
  • don't know
  • don't care


View results

Fun Stuff


Play Sudoku