Originally posted by Risorgimento
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between 1995-2011, on average each EEA immigrant put about £6,000 more into the public purse than they took out.
This is the relevant figure, as the discussion here is about the EU.
If you want to include non-EEA immigrants,
EEA and non-EEA - considered together, take out around £14,000 more than they put in, amounting to a deficit of around £95bn for the public purse between 1995-2011.
However, that should be compared with
how much native Brits are each putting in and taking out of the public purse. On average, each native Briton took out roughly £11,000 more than they put in between 1995-2011.
And
It's worth highlighting the UCL calculations are conservative, in the sense that they are likely to allocate relatively more costs to immigrants than to natives.
"For instance, while allocating costs of education of children to immigrants, we allocate the contributions of these children when they enter the labour market to natives," Dustmann says.
So Richard isn't 'wrong', nor indulging in wishfull thinking. He could be accused of selecting his facts to suit his argument, but then so could you.
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