David Smith
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TWO people in every five are either planning to move abroad or have seriously considered doing so, according to a new poll.
The poll, carried out by YouGov for the Taxpayers’ Alliance, a pressure group, suggests that unhappiness over living in Britain has doubled in the space of a year. The equivalent poll carried out this time last year showed that 22% had seriously contemplated emigrating or were planning to do so. In the latest poll that figure is 40%.
“With a record tax burden, rising prices and barely improved public services, people feel that they are working harder and harder just to stand still,” said Matthew Elliott, chief executive of the Taxpayers’ Alliance. “In these circumstances it’s unsurprising that so many people are looking for a better life abroad.”
He added: “Voters want better government and lower taxes and the party that adopts this modern agenda will reap the elec-toral rewards.”
Last month official figures showed that more people left the UK in the year to mid-2006 than in any year since records began in their present form in 1991. The Office for National Statistics said 385,000 people left Britain permanently - 196,000 British citizens and 189,000 long-term migrants who had been living in Britain for more than a year.
A recent analysis showed that 5.5m people born in Britain now live permanently abroad. The most popular destinations are Australia, Spain, France and America, but there is a growing list of countries - 41 in all - with more than 10,000 permanent British-born residents.
Those who emigrate tend to be younger people without family ties and those retiring. The poll shows that 50% of 25 to 34-year-olds have either given serious thought to moving abroad permanently or are planning to do so.
Their main financial bugbears in Britain were high utility bills (65%), council tax (61%), rising prices in general (54%), the affordability of housing (51%), the rising tax burden generally (37%) and high levels of debt (36%).
Other surveys have pointed to nonfinancial concerns such as crime and antisocial behaviour, overcrowding, poor transport and high levels of immigration.
With worries about job security and unemployment coming low down on people’s list of financial worries, the Taxpayers’ Alliance says that the Conservatives, in presenting an alternative to Labour, should focus on high council tax bills and the overall tax burden.
Click here for more details of Taxpayers' Alliance/YouGov poll
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The only way I might consider moving back to the UK is if a government was elected to reduce the number of politicians by 75%, reduce the pay pension and other benefits of the whole lot of them by the same amount and go after all the previous lot for the amount they have stolen, misappropriated, squandered and otherwise wasted in the last ten years or so. In this way, it could be returned to its rightful owners, the hard working, the enterprising, the retired and all those who have responsibly provided for themselves and their families throughout their lives. Of course, I would also expect all future politicians to provide proper audited accounts for every penny of public money they claim or expend.
With such radical policies, you might even get some worthy people to stand for election. Those with real talent and with a proper sense of public duty and a desire to really do something to improve the world might be tempted to enter government.
Ali D., St Helier, JERSEY
What a lot of nonsense! One thing alone drives emigration, and that's the price of property. Sell a decent family home in the UK and you can buy one just as nice in Franxce or Spain and get a huge amount of change.
Does anyone seriously think that energy bills (which aren't that different across Europe) will drive anyone out of the country?
Richard Bristow, Marlow, England
It seems, from the YouGov survey and the information on financial bugbears that in fact more younger people, and older people who have retired and can afford to emigrate, do so because of the high cost of utility bills, the iniquitous Council Tax which is based on the perceived value of bricks and mortar and not on income and revenue, general prices for goods and services in UK and the cost of housing that is driving people out well ahead of the general tax burden. Perhaps then some 'wise' politician will realize the importance of these statistics and make much greater effort to deal with utility prices, the Council Tax and replace it with a local income tax and, give due consideration to doubling the personal allowance to offset the amount of taxation, direct and indirect, that those on the lowest and poorest rungs of society have to suffer.
Kenneth Armitage, Suffolk, England
Two of my sons have already gone. They're both highly qualified and very entrepreneurial engineers. My third son is off as soon as he finishes his degree.
None of them see a future here and that's very sad. But as the eldest says - he's an aerospace expert - the UK is completely devoid of vision and aspiration when it comes to real engineering and the only thing that gets people excited is financial services and flogging expensive houses. In short, the UK is in terminal decline.. Thanks Gordon!
Scamp, Aberdeenshire,