The United Bank of Switzerland, which is one of the world’s largest banks and gold traders, called in its January 2016 Investment Report entitled The Future of Europe that Europe should double the number of “migrants” into its borders in order to keep up with demand for “qualified workers”:
A screenshot from part of the report
To match the US labor growth rate, the EU needs 1.8m additional immigrants (of working age) annually for the next 10 years, for example. This is substantially higher than the level of net immigration into the EU before the global financial crisis, and far above the net annual average of 0.6–0.7m immigrants since then. A clear change in immigration policies could address this situation. Global competition for qualified workers, who naturally seek the most attractive destinations, is growing. Unfortunately, the initial measures the EU took to reverse its weak immigration policy following the global financial crisis by admitting refugees turned into a debacle. The dysfunctional reaction of Europe to the refugee crisis and the related chaos at its borders has not improved its image as a highly desirable destination for immigrants. What’s more, our estimate that 1.8m additional net immigrants of working age are needed annually to match US labor growth dwarfs the number associated with the current European refugee.
I am sure that all of these new “refugees” to Europe are just the kinds of “qualified workers” the continent needs, especially considering that more that 90% are on some form of welfare,
they need signs to tell them where to defecate and where to shower, because many cannot understand or do not care about basic hygiene,
they burn the free things that are given to them,
they brag about raping non-Muslim women,
they teach their children to hate the society that invited them,
they attack, rob, and threaten to murder their sympathisers,
and they bring lots of deadly diseases with them.
If these are the future “Europeans,” perhaps the French city of Calais is a model for a future European city:
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