Local view for "http://purl.org/linkedpolitics/eu/plenary/2004-02-11-Speech-3-095"

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"en.20040211.4.3-095"2
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". Young people are told that it is becoming increasingly easier for them to work abroad. For some, working abroad for a while to gain experience is fun, but it is not if it is a necessity because jobs in their own profession are dying out in their own country, so that they can only be found in far-flung places. People are altogether disenchanted if they have to work abroad at lower wages and with no recognition for the qualifications they have gained. According to EU propaganda, everyone in every Member State is entitled to work at normal wages that are current in that country, and qualifications are mutually recognised. Practice, however, differs a great deal from that ideal image. Foreign teachers do not qualify for equivalent work in France and Italy. According to petitions recently received, Greece does not recognise university degrees gained abroad by Greeks, and there are also problems in Baden-Württemberg and Scotland. I do not get the impression that the proposed amendment of fifteen directives will really solve the problems. At best, there will be more freedom to settle on the part of those practising liberal professions, whereby foreigners will no longer need to meet the licensing and registration requirements, but these will remain compulsory for their domestic counterparts. According to medical specialists, the equal status for their qualifications has not been regulated very well by the European Commission. The complaints are set to persist."@en1

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