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Over
the centuries many different peoples have migrated to the British
Isles, from Vikings to Italians, Jews to Africans. In both World Wars
the British Army contained many troops from overseas (almost a third
in the Great War). Many cherished British institutions were developed
by migrants — not just Marks and Spencer but Moss Bros, Burton’s,
ICI and meals on wheels. Even the figureheads at the top of the tree
are migrants: the royal family was French after the Norman Conquest,
and later German. Queen Victoria, often seen as one of the greatest
British monarchs, had almost all German ancestors, and she and Prince
Albert spoke German to each other.
As
such examples might suggest, movement across national frontiers was
once less encumbered than it is now. The Aliens Act of 1905 and the
imposition of passports during the First World War led to all the
paraphernalia of visas, border controls, illegal immigration and so
on. Immigrant ships could now be turned back, and customs officers
could refuse entry to those deemed unable to support themselves. But
the whole border and migration system is very expensive to maintain,
another reason why many capitalists dislike it. In 1999, for
instance, the Immigration and Naturalization Sevice in the US had a
budget of over $4 billion, mostly spent on the border with Mexico.
It
is often objected that migrants move from one country to another in
order to claim benefits and live off the backs of ‘indigenous’
people. But there is no reason to think this is true in the vast
majority of cases. Benefits are low, and most migrants are not
entitled to them anyway. The migration journey can be expensive and
hard, often indeed fatal, with many dying at sea on leaky boats or
while trying to cross a frontier. Migrants are rarely well off in the
country they move to, forming an underclass with little if any
security of employment or housing. A committee of the British
parliament described official attitudes to migrants and paying
benefits to them as ‘a deliberate policy of destitution’, a rare
example of straight talking from such a body.
Margaret
Thatcher famously talked of people afraid of being ‘swamped’ by
immigrants, a refrain taken up by the British National Party and
MigrationWatch. The latter want strict limits on numbers of migrants,
while the BNP want to stop immigration to the UK completely and start
a programme of ‘voluntary’ resettlement. Even workers who do not
support such ideas may still blame migrants as convenient scapegoats.
This is often based on totally wrong ideas, such as that the
proportion of immigrants in the British population is far higher than
its true figure of four percent, or that asylum-seekers receive much
more in benefits than the measly sum they actually get.
The
Socialist response to all this is simply to point out that poverty
and social disruption are caused by capitalism, a social system which
requires the vast majority of the population to rely on selling their
labour power to survive. With or without immigration there will be
unemployment, homelessness, crime. Migration is the other side of
globalisation, the massive increase in the interdependence of various
parts of the planet. Investment is directed overseas, as capitalists
look for the biggest profit they can extract and build factories or
sweatshops in China, Thailand, and so on. But at the same time some
jobs have to be done in the developed world — foodstuffs can be
grown half way around the world, but the cooks, waiters and
dishwashers have to work in restaurants in London or Manchester.
Equally,
talk about migration undermining indigenous culture is so much
hogwash. A nation is not something natural but an artificial idea
that has been constructed over the centuries, based on accidents of
geography and history. From fish and chips to curry and pizza, food
in Britain is a mixture just as much as the inhabitants of these
islands are. Globalisation may be leading to a unitary world culture,
but Starbucks and American television are more responsible for this
than migration.
“Open
borders” is a capitalist slogan, not one that Socialists endorse.
Socialism will be a world without borders and with no concept of
migration, where we will all be at home anywhere.
Paul
Bennett
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