The Herald

Most Scots want to see more migrants

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THE majority of respondent­s to a recent poll want to see more skilled people coming to Scotland from overseas.

The study, by the Diffley Partnershi­p for Migration Policy Scotland, spoke to 2,035 Scots between February 1 and February 5.

Responding to the poll, 59% said the number of skilled worker visas given out should be increased, with 26% saying they should stay the same and 9% urging a reduction.

The number was also almost half (48%) when respondent­s were asked specifical­ly about health and social care workers, with 25% wanting the number to remain at the same level and 18% believing it should go down.

In total, 61% also agreed that employers should be able to look outside Scotland to fill vacancies, a figure that increased to 79% for sectors with “critical shortages” – such as health and social care.

Control of migration remains under the control of the UK Government, despite an attempt by Nicola Sturgeon in early 2020 to secure powers for a Scottish-specific visa system to address shortages in the workforce.

Dr Sarah Kyambi, the director of Migration Policy Scotland, said: “The socio-economic and demographi­c challenges facing Scotland are immense, and migration will play an important role in meeting these.

“Our research suggests that the Scottish public wish to see a pragmatic response to these realworld challenges at a time when our politics and policymaki­ng is implementi­ng an evermore restrictiv­e regime.”

And Professor Bobby Duffy, a director at the Policy Institute, added: “This survey shows the Scottish public are nowhere near as negative or exercised about immigratio­n as the rhetoric often suggests, which is a pattern we see repeated in Uk-wide surveys.”

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