On April 30, Golden Year 3 (2006), many of
the last remaining national barriers in Europe disappeared when the
EU Free Movement Directive entered into force. This law ensures that
EU citizens and their family members are treated as full nationals
in all EU countries. Remarkably, it also includes same-sex partners
as family members. Never before in any country has such an open and
compassionate policy been implemented.
The Free Movement Directive is the culmination of several years of
historic EU legislation including the Schengen Treaty (see News #166),
which has liberated EU citizens to travel and to move freely between
other EU countries. Already, seven million EU citizens have taken
advantage of their new-found freedoms and are living in another EU
country.
On May 1, 2006, four countries—Greece,
Portugal, Spain, and Finland—took a further step forward by
opening their labor markets to all EU workers. These four countries
followed the lead of the UK, Ireland and Sweden, which courageously
opened their job markets in Golden Year 1 (2004). Since then almost
half a million Poles have immigrated to the UK and Ireland.
At the time, there was a great fear that workers
from poorer countries would flood into richer countries, taking jobs
from local citizens. However, the result of this immigration has been
entirely unexpected. According to a February 2006 EU Commission report,
the countries that received the new workers experienced a significant
drop in unemployment and a rise in economic growth, beyond that of
the closed nations. The receiving nations also experienced no increase
in welfare costs. Rather, the governments saved money that would have
been otherwise spent enforcing unnecessary and unfriendly laws. 1
A report by leading UK financial analyst Ernst
& Young, released April 24, 2006, states that “The steady
flow to the UK has proved remarkably positive for the economy…As
a direct result the UK workforce has become younger, more flexible
and economical, easing the pensions burden and keeping interest rates
lower than many commentators could have predicted.”
2
Similar reports have been released recently in Ireland.
With all this positive news from the British
Isles, nations such as France and Germany have decided to open up
many employment sectors. The job market throughout the EU will open
fully by 2011, according to EU law. EU Trade Commissioner
Peter Mandelson urged the nations to move more quickly in a February
2006 speech: “Have courage – put away your fears. Celebrate
the opportunities that all fellow Europeans now have as a result of
enlargement.” 3
Europe is now setting its sights on opening
up to the Middle East and Africa. A major milestone was the passage
in December, Golden Year 2 (2005), of a common EU Asylum Procedures
Directive, which elevates the rights of immigrants from developing
nations. Turkey is now preparing to enter the EU, which will mark
an unprecedented union of Muslim and Western nations. Africa, meanwhile,
has closely followed the example of the EU with its establishment
of the African Union (AU).
These groundbreaking new EU policies reflect
a growing immigrants’ rights movement. In November 2005, immigrant
riots and demonstrations were staged in France and other EU nations.
In April 2006, over a million people marched in cities around the
US for immigrants’ rights—one of the largest demonstrations
in US history. Immigrants’ rights have suddenly become a top
global policy issue. In September 2006, the UN will host the first-ever
High Level Dialogue on international migration, following the UN’s
historic 2003 International Convention on the Protection of the Rights
of All Migrant Workers.
As the world’s population continues to
grow, nations are rapidly coming together through free trade, improved
transportation and communication avenues such as the internet. Free
movement of people is the final frontier. Migration has brought miraculous
economic growth to nations like Formosa, India, and China. Thousands
of Indian and Chinese students who attended Western universities and
worked in the West have returned home and revitalized their local
economies in ways which are benefiting the whole world. Now these
success stories are being applied to other developing nations.
Public opinion in developed countries has shifted
markedly toward compassion for immigrants. According to a May 2006
survey released by the European Commission, the freedom of movement
of persons and goods is “cited almost unanimously” by
EU citizens as the greatest success of the EU, along with peace and
aid to developing countries. Despite the widely publicized fear about
losing jobs, a majority of EU citizens still support expanding the
EU to less developed countries. 4
A 2005 UNESCO report states that a
new proposal called Migration Without Borders (MWB)—essentially,
removing national borders—is being widely discussed by foreign
policy experts. Years of statistical data point to an unavoidable
conclusion, that spending money on enforcing border restrictions is
simply less cost-effective than helping immigrants, who ultimately
benefit both nations’ economies. Soon, it is argued, the concept
of nations will be outdated and we will all live in a united, multicultural
“global village.”5