Regigate
New Member
Valid point, Admiral. I would say some fields less so than others (accountants, engineers, other business professionals, even scientists or academics probably being easiest to settle into our institutions immediately, whereas nurses, doctors, lawyers I would imagine tend to have a more difficult go of things).
Those countries do need their own professionals, you are correct, but I'm not sure we should feel bad for allowing skilled people, who are lining up in droves to come into our country, into our country. Yes, it will damage their own country, making it harder / longer for them to achieve relative parity, but if we don't accept them, the UK or US or an EU country, or Australia will - unfortunately we're not one, big global family who can all agree to co-operate in the name of developing less fortunate countries; so we might as well take advantage of the immigration market, lest we be left behind.
Those countries do need their own professionals, you are correct, but I'm not sure we should feel bad for allowing skilled people, who are lining up in droves to come into our country, into our country. Yes, it will damage their own country, making it harder / longer for them to achieve relative parity, but if we don't accept them, the UK or US or an EU country, or Australia will - unfortunately we're not one, big global family who can all agree to co-operate in the name of developing less fortunate countries; so we might as well take advantage of the immigration market, lest we be left behind.