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An article published The
observer (08/02/2004)
I choose it for several reasons:
- I need a little change from the Iraq war discussion,
it start to go round and round...
- Immigration is a big topic in EU, specially with the
soon integration of the 10 new state members. The problems that comes with
uncontrolled and unwilling immigration have a special sound in France since the
21 April.
- The liberal dilemma is well explained by
Tory MP David Willetts
'If values become more diverse, if lifestyles
become more differentiated, then it becomes more difficult to sustain the
legitimacy of a universal risk-pooling welfare state. People ask, "Why
should I pay for them when they are doing things I wouldn't do?" This is
America versus Sweden. You can have a Swedish welfare state provided that you
are a homogeneous society with intensely shared values. In the US, you have a
very diverse, individualistic society where people feel fewer obligations to
fellow citizens. Progressives want diversity but they thereby undermine part of
the moral consensus on which a large welfare state rests.'
Horns of the liberal dilemma
The tragedy of the Chinese workers in Morecambe and the simmering
arguments about freedom of movement in a newly enlarged European Union have
focused attention once again on immigration. David Goodhart, one of our leading
liberal intellectuals and editor of the progressives' journal, Prospect, offers
a penetrating analysis and a radical prescription for one of the most
contentious issues facing us
Sunday February 8, 2004
The Observer
Just as anxieties about asylum-seekers seem to be fading, along come two events
to stir up our acute sensitivity about migration into Britain. The first is the
tragedy of the 19 Chinese who died while cockling in Morecambe Bay, providing a
glimpse of the shadowy world of illegal immigrants. The second is the tabloid
campaign against the Government's proposed 'open door' policy towards citizens
of the east European countries joining the EU in May.
Many decent, liberal voices have been raised in
protest against the Government's apparent capitulation to this tabloid campaign,
which highlighted the large numbers of gypsies who might turn up and claim
benefit. There is an even better liberal case for the Government's change of
mind. Moreover, the public anxiety about mass migration, while in some cases
fuelled by xenophobia or racism, is usually based on a rational understanding of
the value of British citizenship and its incompatibility with over-porous
borders.
The abstract language of globalisation and
universal human rights risks blinding us to some basic truths about our society.
The national community remains the basic unit of human political organisation
and will remain so long into the future. And when politicians talk about this
community or the 'British people', they refer not just to a set of individuals
with specific rights and duties but to a group of people with a special
commitment to one another.
Membership in such a community implies
acceptance of moral rules, however fuzzy, which underpin the laws and welfare
systems of the state. It also confers immense privileges - physical security,
freedom of many kinds, the chance to flourish economically, free education, free
health care, and welfare benefits if you cannot support yourself.
National citizenship is inherently
exclusionary. We place our fellow citizens in Bolton before the people of
Burundi, otherwise we would be spending as much on foreign aid as on the NHS,
rather than one twenty-fifth of the sum. If everyone in the world was entitled
to the benefits of British citizenship, as is sometimes implied by human rights
law, our schools and hospitals would very swiftly collapse. They would also
collapse pretty swiftly if Britain had an open-door migration policy.
We do have such an open-door policy towards
people in other EU states, but relatively few citizens settle here because they
live in societies at a broadly similar level of economic development. For the
billions living on less than $1 a day, a place like Britain represents a kind of
paradise, which is why so many people are prepared to risk their lives to get
here.
Migration today is different from previous eras
in two respects. First, it is a lot easier and cheaper for people in even
relatively poor countries to get to the developed world. Second, European
countries like Britain have highly developed welfare states which compel their
citizens to share their resources with strangers to a degree unimaginable in
previous ages.
Such welfare states were established when
European states were much more homogeneous - in terms of life-styles, values and
ethnicity - than today. Notwithstanding strong class and regional differences,
those societies thought of themselves as extended kin groups, 'a family,' in
Orwell's famous words about England, 'with the wrong members in charge'.
Fifty years of peace, wealth and mobility, plus
two big waves of immigration, has created a very different Britain marked by
much greater diversity of values and lifestyles. Some people, especially older
people, regret the shift. Most people probably broadly welcome it.
Welcome or not, greater diversity almost by
definition eats away at a common culture and feelings of mutual obligation, yet
a strong common culture is required to sustain a generous welfare state. This is
what I have described elsewhere as the 'progressive dilemma' (see the current
issue of Prospect magazine).
The best summary of the dilemma has been given
by Tory MP David Willetts: 'If values become more diverse, if lifestyles become
more differentiated, then it becomes more difficult to sustain the legitimacy of
a universal risk-pooling welfare state. People ask, "Why should I pay for
them when they are doing things I wouldn't do?" This is America versus
Sweden. You can have a Swedish welfare state provided that you are a homogeneous
society with intensely shared values. In the US, you have a very diverse,
individualistic society where people feel fewer obligations to fellow citizens.
Progressives want diversity but they thereby undermine part of the moral
consensus on which a large welfare state rests.'
The progressive dilemma lurks beneath many
aspects of current politics: national tax and redistribution policies; EU
integration and spending on the poorer southern and east European states; and
even the tensions between America (built on political ideals and mass
immigration) and Europe (based on nation states with core ethnic-linguistic
solidarities).
It is also most painfully present in the debate
about asylum and immigration. If welfare states demand that we pay into a common
fund on which we can all draw at times of need, we need to be reassured that
strangers, especially those from other countries and ethnic groups, have the
same idea of reciprocity as we do.
Of course immigrants contribute, sometimes
disproportionately, to the welfare state too. But public opinion tends to focus
on the relatively small number, both immigrant and indigenous, who take out more
than they put in. A recent Prospect /Mori poll asked, among other things,
whether 'other people seem to get unfair priority over you when it comes to
public services and state benefits?' Forty five per cent agreed that they did.
It is a depressingly high figure which shows the anxiety people, especially
among lower income groups, have about freeloading.
There seems to be something in the combination
of relatively high personal taxation and the inability to see clearly where
one's taxes are spent that makes people highly sensitised to being taken
advantage of. Public policy sometimes makes matters worse: one of the reasons
why asylum-seekers create such resentment is that the system currently bans them
from legal work and forces them on to benefit for at least two years - it forces
them to be 'freeloaders'.
There was also some good news hidden in our
poll. When asked to name who they thought was getting unfair priority, 20 per
cent named asylum-seekers and 19 per cent new immigrants. But Britain's
established minorities - Asians and black people - were hardly mentioned.
Absorbing outsiders into a community worthy of the name - turning the immigrant
'them' into the fellow citizen 'us' with whom we are willing to share - takes
time, but it can be done.
It can be less easily done if a majority of
people are troubled, as countless polls suggest they are, by the quantity, type
and speed of immigration and if they believe that the Government has lost
control of the flow of people into the country. That is why the Government is
right to review the open-door policy to east Europeans. If hundreds of thousands
were to arrive in a short space of time, it would stir up fears about migration
in general, cause serious strains on the public services and hit those people at
the bottom of the labour market (many immigrants themselves) hardest.
The government, understandably, wants to have
it both ways on the migration debate. It wants to stress, rightly, the cultural
and economic dynamism that comes with relatively high levels of immigration -
and it celebrates the fact that roughly 200,000 legal immigrants come to Britain
each year. But the Government is also aware that many of the costs of high
immigration fall on poorer, white Britons. David Blunkett has bravely spoken up
about the real conflicts that this can lead to and the need to shore up a common
culture by better integration of some immigrant groups.
Taking a 'tough' line on asylum and immigration
is not just pandering to the Daily Mail. It is a necessary condition of
maintaining public confidence in a system of managed migration. How else might
popular anxieties be answered? There is a case, as Meghnad Desai has argued, for
introducing more 'two-tier' welfare, as is currently happening in Denmark.
Certain kinds of migrants (the east Europeans, for example, for a transitional
period) could be allowed residence and the right to work but access to only
limited parts of the welfare state.
Such a two-tier welfare state might reduce
pressure on the asylum system and also help to deracialise citizenship - white,
middle-class bankers and Asian shopkeepers would have full British citizenship,
while Slovenian temporary workers would not. If we want to combine social
solidarity with relatively high immigration, there is also a case for ID cards
on logistical grounds and as a badge of citizenship entitlement that transcends
narrower group and ethnic loyalties.
Critics of the progressive dilemma thesis point
to the fact that public spending and tax levels remain at historically high
levels throughout Europe despite the big increase in diversity of all kinds over
the past 30 years. That is true, but the sort of long-term decline in solidarity
that I fear is likely to take decades to emerge. And if public policy takes no
account of the boundaries of people's willingness to share we may wake up in a
generation's time and find we have become a US-style society with sharp ethnic
tension, a weak welfare state and low political participation.
You do not build a generous country by ignoring
people's fears or pretending that they have the same affinities towards, or
obligations to, a Slovakian gypsy as they do towards their own families,
communities and fellow citizens.