The big crisis awaits Britain: More than a million workers will abandon the country because of BREXT

Highly qualified foreign workers will likely leave the United Kingdom in the near future, while 47 percent of them are supposed to do so over the next five years, writes The Guardian. More than a million foreign workers are preparing [...]
More than a million foreign workers are preparing to leave Great Britain, adding fears that this country will face a depletion of brilliant minds, as a result of Brex, broadcast Telegrafi.
Recent research shows that 36 percent of foreign workers currently working in this country are considering leaving until 2020, until 26 percent will leave Britain over the next three years.
While these figures do not sound quite dramatic, they are in fact taking into account the fact that 1.2 million foreign workers planning to leave a total of 3.4 million living and operating in the United Kingdom create a serious crisis of doing business that this country has been facing since the start of the European Union's exit process.
On this break from the United Kingdom are thinking those highly qualified foreign workers who after Brex are not feeling welcome in this country. Their percentage is 32.
Britain's prime minister earlier this month has said that citizens of the European Union living in the United Kingdom can stay in this country even when Britain leaves the European family, until European leaders have assured them that EU citizens will be given the opportunity to regulate their status and gain British citizenship, broadcasting Telegrafi.

The British prime minister's offer includes the same treatment for British citizens in terms of health, education, benefits and pension. According to experts, there is a serious problem as it has conditioned the leaders of the European Union states to offer the same treatment to all Britons living in European Union countries, which means that in the long and complex process of harmonisation, many Europeans in Great Britain will continue to live under the shadow of uncertainty.
The problem will also affect British employers, since the loss of millions of jobs will not be easily covered.
In spite of all the worries, a dose of comfort for British employers lies in the fact that Great Britain is generally considered a good place to live and work.
Despite the uncertainty and confusion that Brex has brought about, 89 percent of foreign workers believe Great Britain meets all the criteria to work and this country exceeds the United States, which is considered the best alternative to life. /Telegraphy/












