Local view for "http://purl.org/linkedpolitics/eu/plenary/2008-11-19-Speech-3-169"

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"en.20081119.18.3-169"2
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"− With the Blue Card proposal, it is hoped that the qualified workforce will be attracted to the EU and be given conditions to come temporarily but, at the same time, to remain long term. The proposal states that no brain drain will occur, but rather a brain return - circulation. This is hardly likely. How does the proposal appear in the context of the development cooperation policies? With the introduction of the Blue Card, developing countries will lose specialists, in whose training the EU also participated, particularly from the most sensitive areas - education and health. The shortage of those specialists, perhaps, will have to be filled by volunteers from our countries. Furthermore, the United Kingdom, Ireland and Denmark are not participating in the Blue Card with its ethics of not inviting specialists from sensitive sectors in developing countries. In this case, initiatives to support developing countries seem false. Apparently, the interests of business still prevail. In reality, the Blue Card may cause developing countries great intellectual damage."@en1
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