Capitalism is a system based on divide and rule, male versus
female, young against old, employed pitted against unemployed and successive
governments in Britain have played the race card (in Northern Ireland it was
religion) or resorted to xenophobia to try to set workers against one another. The
slogan of “British jobs for British workers” deflects from the possibility of
solidarity and reflects a “divide and rule” situation in which fearful workers
turn on “foreigners”. One section of the ruling class does not benefit from
migrant workers and therefore does not want to bear the costs, while another
section has been keen to defend the benefits of immigration. Political parties
in Britain have once more begun to talk about immigration during this 2015
general election campaign. Unfortunately the debate is usually an ill-informed
one and typically just a cover to introduce nationalist notions about the
impact of immigration.
Migrant workers play a distinct role in capitalism as a
“reserve army of labour” Employers use special schemes in agriculture and the
so-called “hospitality” sector to import workers on a temporary basis. Advanced
capitalist economies regularly poach workers with particular skills, such as
nurses, teachers and social workers, from developing countries.
The use of migrant
workers also allows the receiver country to externalise the costs of renewing
the labour force. The state uses migrant workers to fill gaps in the labour
market but does not pay any of the costs of them or their families settling.
Migrant workers are
especially useful as part of the reserve army of labour because they can
quickly be expelled. Nigeria expelled two million immigrant workers from other
West African countries in the wake of the collapse of the oil market in the
early 1980s, for instance.
Employers do not
simply want to obtain additional labour. They also want to get workers who can
be used under specific conditions to raise the rate of exploitation. In some
cases bosses will try to employ migrant workers even when indigenous workers
are available because they assume that migrants’ status will make them easier
to exploit. The vast majority of migrant workers have been used to fill the
worst and most badly paid jobs. The use of migrant workers is inextricably
linked to increasing labour “flexibility” to ratchet up the rate of
exploitation. This is driven by increased competition between capitals.
Research puts a strong case against linking immigration to
depressed wages or increased unemployment and suggests little or no evidence
that immigrants have had a major impact although it is conceded that there is a
limited negative effect on the lower skilled and the lower paid. While there is
pressure on the wages of the worst paid workers, it is not the case that
migrant workers are responsible for this. The drive for “flexibility” and lower
wages goes back much further than the influx of workers from Eastern Europe. Privatisation,
outsourcing and subcontracting have intensified competition over the past two
decades in industries such as cleaning and other badly paid service sector jobs
as well as construction. It is expensive for employers to invest in the
infrastructure to train workers, so the exploitation of an already highly
skilled labour market is utilised. When there is contraction in the market, the
pushing back of migration occurs and vice versa. During these times the
scapegoating of migrants and refugees is prevalent. Worker's fears are stoked
by an austerity driven government, successfully deflecting people’s attention
away from a lack of job prospects and cuts to services by pointing the finger
at migrant workers.
Undoubtedly some employers in individual workplaces have
sought to employ migrant workers on poorer pay and conditions of service. It is
easy to see how employers could seek to employ workers on worse pay and
conditions. The lesson to learn is in the importance of uniting indigenous and
migrant workers, and of the role of trade unions. Not to organise these workers
would weaken the movement as a whole. We are rightly fearful that migrant
workers will be used as scapegoats. It is bosses who try to hold down pay to
make bigger profits. They want workers to blame each other because it keeps
them divided. Workers who resist this division can win better pay for all. It
is crucial to argue in their workplaces and unions that blame does not lie with
the migrant workers but with the cut-throat competition of capitalism that sets
one person against one another in dog-eat-dog rivalry. The most successful way to defeat low pay and
conditions is to unite and organise against exploitative employers. When
workers unite for fair pay and conditions, it strengthens the position of all
workers.
Many of the above arguments are a rehash of ideas which
opposed the movement of women into the work-force and even supported pay
differentials, restricting their wages relative to men. Same with the
employment of younger workers who once were placed on a pay-increment scale
based upon age. Migrants and refugees are the scapegoats for people’s anxieties
and fears about their livelihoods and quality of life. Migrants are not only
being blamed for unemployment, but they are also being blamed for taking
advantage of free healthcare and other welfare benefits.
Immigrants are also being blamed for the housing shortage.
Rents are going up, and homes are becoming harder to find. But who is to blame?
It’s certainly not migrants, who end up with some of the worst and most
overcrowded housing. There is a shortage of housing because not enough is being
built. And those being constructed are luxury flats aimed at the well-off and
unaffordable to those on average wages.
“Health tourism” and “benefit tourism” are myths. The NHS
would grind to a halt without migrant workers. It has relied on migrant labour
from the time Enoch Powell as Health Minister invited West Indian nurses to
staff the wards. Many say Britain is already “full up” and this seems to chime
with a certain common sense—surely, more people means less to go round. But
that isn’t how it works. Wealth is not shared out either fairly nor rationally.
And the pot of wealth is not fixed. Our labour creates wealth. Yet the rich get
more than the rest put together.
In reality the debate
on immigration in Britain is not about the economic causes and consequences of
immigration at all. It is overwhelmingly a ‘debate’ that allows politicians and
others to whip up xenophobia while posing as being concerned about the
interests of workers or the poor. Borders are designed to control workers in
the interest of capitalist accumulation. Immigration laws turn people into
criminals. Threats by employers who use
immigration status to keep workers from organizing unions or protesting illegal
conditions should be a crime. We have many big cities with scores of different
nationalities living within them and as socialists we celebrate that rich
tapestry of life. Some of us are waking up. We are finding out what is wrong
with the world. We are going to make it right.
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