Public consultation on the EU s labour migration policies and the EU Blue Card

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Case Id: a7782249-af60-4a44-87db-aed4d979c8d8 Date: 03/07/2015 23:24:35 Public consultation on the EU s labour migration policies and the EU Blue Card Fields marked with * are mandatory. 1 Your Contact Details * *1.1 Name n-eu migrant already in the EU 62 1.2 Organisation's Name 1.3 Address * *1.4 Email 1.5 Country of current residence or where your organisation is based: Ireland {Republic} 2 Your Profile 1

* *2.1 In what capacity are you completing the questionnaire? Employer Employer's organisation Trade Union Executive and Senior-Level Management (Oversees Mid-Level Management and multiple departments; May manage multiple facilities; May manage national or global operations; Manages budgets) n-eu migrant workers and entrepreneurs already residing -or having previously resided- legally in the European Union n-eu migrant workers and entrepreneurs currently outside the European Union but considering or having considered to migrate to the EU Public Employment Service Private Employment Service National Ministry n-governmental Organisations (support network, assistance, services) Regional Authority Local Authority National Consulate/Embassy National Statistical Office Private Individuals Academia n-governmental Organisations (advocacy) Media International organisations Organisations or authorities of the countries of origin Others 2.1.1.3 Gender: Male Female 2.1.1.4 Citizenship: Brazil 2.1.1.5 Second citizenship (if applicable): Afghanistan Albania Algeria Andorra Angola Antigua & Deps 2

Argentina Armenia Australia Austria Azerbaijan Bahamas Bahrain Bangladesh Barbados Belarus Belgium Belize Benin Bhutan Bolivia Bosnia Herzegovina Botswana Brazil Brunei Bulgaria Burkina Burundi Cambodia Cameroon Canada Cape Verde Central African Rep Chad Chile China Colombia Comoros Congo Congo {Democratic Rep} Costa Rica Croatia Cuba Cyprus Czech Republic Denmark Djibouti Dominica Dominican Republic East Timor Ecuador Egypt 3

El Salvador Equatorial Guinea Eritrea Estonia Ethiopia Fiji Finland France Gabon Gambia Georgia Germany Ghana Greece Grenada Guatemala Guinea Guinea-Bissau Guyana Haiti Honduras Hungary Iceland India Indonesia Iran Iraq Ireland {Republic} Israel Italy Ivory Coast Jamaica Japan Jordan Kazakhstan Kenya Kiribati Korea rth Korea South Kosovo Kuwait Kyrgyzstan Laos Latvia Lebanon Lesotho 4

Liberia Libya Liechtenstein Lithuania Luxembourg former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia Madagascar Malawi Malaysia Maldives Mali Malta Marshall Islands Mauritania Mauritius Mexico Micronesia Moldova Monaco Mongolia Montenegro Morocco Mozambique Myanmar, {Burma} Namibia Nauru Nepal Netherlands New Zealand Nicaragua Niger Nigeria rway Oman Pakistan Palau Panama Papua New Guinea Paraguay Peru Philippines Poland Portugal Qatar Romania Russian Federation 5

Rwanda St Kitts & Nevis St Lucia Saint Vincent & the Grenadines Samoa San Marino Sao Tome & Principe Saudi Arabia Senegal Serbia Seychelles Sierra Leone Singapore Slovakia Slovenia Solomon Islands Somalia South Africa South Sudan Spain Sri Lanka Sudan Suriname Swaziland Sweden Switzerland Syria Taiwan Tajikistan Tanzania Thailand Togo Tonga Trinidad & Tobago Tunisia Turkey Turkmenistan Tuvalu Uganda Ukraine United Arab Emirates United Kingdom United States Uruguay Uzbekistan Vanuatu 6

Vatican City Venezuela Vietnam Yemen Zambia Zimbabwe 2.1.1.6 Age group 18-25 years 26-35 years 36-45 years 46-55 years 56-65 years over 65 years 2.1.1.7 Current situation: Residing within the EU Lived and worked in the EU and have now moved outside of the EU 2.1.1.10 Did you set up a business or are you considering setting up a business in the EU? * *2.1.1.11 Level of education [ISCED 2011] Lower secondary education Upper secondary education Post-secondary non-tertiary education Short-cycle tertiary education Bachelor or equivalent Master or equivalent Doctoral or equivalent (Professional training) 7

* *2.1.1.12 Field of education 0 General Programmes 1 Education 2 Humanities and Arts 3 Social sciences, business and law 4 Science 5 Engineering, manufacturing and construction 6 Agriculture 7 Health and welfare 8 Services 9 t known or unspecified * *2.1.1.17 Science: Life sciences Physical sciences Mathematics and statistics Computing * *2.1.1.22 Current status: Employee Self-employed Entrepreneur Unemployed 3 LABOUR MARKETS 3.11 Did you manage easily to find a job in the Member State where you are working? 3.12 Would your intention be/ was your intention to set up a business? 4 AVAILABILITY OF INFORMATION 8

4.3 Did you/do you easily find information about job vacancies in EU Member States and/or about labour market shortages in particular sectors or particular Member States?, this information is easily available, it is difficult to find this information 4.5 Did you/do you easily find information about the legal ways to come to Europe?, this information is easily available, it is difficult to find this information 4.8 Did you use or do you intend to use a third party (e.g. a lawyer or specialised firm) to help with the immigration procedures and the authorities? 4.17 What are the channels that you use/have used to obtain information on job vacancies in the EU Member States? (tick all that apply) Public employment agencies Private intermediation agencies Professional contacts EURES job portal Online job boards (e.g. Monster,...) Social media (e.g. LinkedIn, Facebook, Twitter,...) On basis of international agreements between your country and the EU Trade Unions Community from your country of origin Charity/NGO If other, specify 4.19 Are you satisfied with those channels? 4.30 What are the channels that you use/have used to obtain information on the legal requirements to migrate in response to job vacancies? EU Immigration Portal Official national websites of EU Member States Unofficial/ Commercial/ Private websites Social media (e.g. LinkedIn, Facebook, Twitter,...) Trade Unions Community from your country of origin Charity/NGO Other (please specify) 9

4.32 Are you satisfied with those channels? 4.33 Please Explain I did not find very easy to understand the transition between my graduate scheme visa and my work permit in Ireland. I've struggled to get information from the official national websites. Everything was very vague and it was sort of trial and error. My employer was very accomodating though. 5 ATTRACTIVENESS OF THE EU 10

5.9 Why did you come to Europe or why do you intend to come? How would you rate the attractiveness of the EU on the following factors? -- - 0 + ++ Level of wages Job opportunities Ease of getting a work permit Conditions for family reunification Welfare and healthcare system Opportunities for family members (professional, schooling, leisure and other) Rule of law The environment Portability of social benefits (e.g. acquired pension rights, sickness insurance ) Personal safety Recognition of foreign qualifications Language(s) spoken in destination country Conditions for permanent residence Openness of the socio-political environment to immigration Availability of integration and language assistance Easy mobility between EU Member States Ease of entering and leaving the EU at will as a permit holder Business friendly environment Innovation friendly environment Quality of life (please specify) Other (please specify) 11

5.10 Quality of life: please specify I got tired of the violence back home. I've just seen too much. 5.11 Other: please specify Integration between academia in industry in Europe is beautiful. 5.15 Which EU Member State did you consider or are you considering migrating to? Austria Belgium Bulgaria Croatia Cyprus Czech Republic Denmark Estonia Finland France Germany Greece Hungary Ireland Italy Latvia Lithuania Luxembourg Malta Netherlands Poland Portugal Romania Slovakia Slovenia Spain Sweden United Kingdom Did you consider or are you considering other destinations besides the EU? 12

5.16 Did you consider or would you consider other destinations besides the EU? If so, which one(s)? USA Canada Australia Singapore Hong Kong China (mainland) Dubai UAE Russia Brazil South Africa Saudi Arabia Switzerland rway Other (please specify) 6 EU BLUE CARD The "EU Blue Card" is a work and residence permit intended to improve the EU s ability to attract highly qualified workers from non-eu countries. For more information, see: http://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal-content/en/txt/?qid=1412351921774&uri=uriserv:l14573 6.4 Have you ever heard of the EU Blue Card before this survey? The "EU Blue Card" is a work and residence permit intended to improve the EU s ability to attract highly qualified workers from non-eu countries. For more information, see: http://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal-content/en/txt/?qid=1412351921774&uri=uriserv:l14573 6.6 Were/Are you employed as a highly qualified worker in the EU? 6.8 Did you apply for/would you consider applying for an EU Blue Card?, I am a Blue Card holder, I applied for an EU Blue Card, but did not receive one or have another permit (Please explain why not-box max 200 words) 13

6.9 Please explain: Sorry, this questions is confusing. I haven't applied for the blue card, but would consider to do so. I have a work permit in Ireland. 6.10 Did you apply for/would you consider applying for another program for highly qualified workers other than the EU Blue Card? 6.11 Please specify: Highly Skilled Scheme in Ireland 6.12 Why did you apply for another program? I had no previous knowledge of the Blue Card, and that would not work for me as an Irish resident. 6.13 Are you aware of any specific reason why you were recruited under a different program than the EU Blue Card? Unavailability of blue card in my resident country. 6.14 The Blue Card Directive sets a number of admission conditions which applicants must fulfil to be allowed into the EU: 1) a work contract or binding job offer of at least one year; 2) a salary of at least 1,5 times the average gross annual salary in the Member State concerned; 3) proof of relevant professional qualifications or fulfilling the national legal requirements Do you consider that the admission conditions of the current EU Blue Card Directive are adequate? Info: higher professional qualifications means evidence of recognised higher education qualifications or at least five years of relevant professional experience; 14

6.17 What aspects would be most important for the attractiveness of the EU Blue Card? Please indicate the factors you consider important (max. three answers possible): at most 3 choice(s) Fast-track entry procedures A clear, streamlined and uniform scheme across all Member States Unrestricted access to the labour market Extension of its scope to other categories, e.g. entrepreneurs Promotion and information provision on the EU Blue Card Favourable conditions for family reunification Availability of integration support (e.g. language courses, job orientation) for highly qualified workers and family members Allowable absences to return to the country of origin Rights and equal treatment Long-term perspectives (e.g. longer validity of the Blue Card or facilitated access to long-term residence status or naturalisation) Easy intra-eu mobility to take up employment opportunities in other Member States Other (please specify) 6.18 Please Specify The core is information and clarity of the process involved. I am not familiar of how this works for the Blue Card but I have the impression the Work Permit explanations in country of residence could be a bit more clear for applicants. 6.19 In many Member States national schemes for attracting highly-skilled labour migrants exist in parallel to the EU Blue Card. In your opinion, in order to make the EU as a whole more attractive for highly qualified migrant workers, do you consider that: It is better to opt for one unified and visible EU-wide scheme, such as an improved EU Blue Card without parallel national programmes It is better to keep parallel national programmes for highly qualified migrant workers in addition to the EU Blue Card opinion 6.22 Why? Please indicate the factors you consider important (multiple answers possible). Separate national programmes Allow Member States to differentiate themselves from other Member States and improve their relative attractiveness Allow to better align national policy preferences with national needs Offer more options for potential migrants Other 15

6.24 Do you consider that the EU Blue Card scheme could be more attractive if its scope were to be expanded to certain additional categories of highly-qualified workers? 6.27 Do you have further comments on how the EU can be made more attractive for highly qualified workers (in particular in relation to the Blue Card directive)? I could write a thesis about this and will try to be brief. I think if Europe wants highly qualified people to come then (we) should feel like Europe want us to stay, for good, integrated like any other citizen, same rights. It is simple like that, however it is not reality, I am afraid. 7 QUALIFICATIONS 7.1 Do you consider the current procedures for the recognition of non-eu qualifications adequate? I do not know 7.2 Please Specify Qualification is not a passport for be treated as a citizen. 7.10 Are you employed below your qualifications in your current job? 7.11 Was your qualification recognised in the Member State where you work?, it was recognised at the same level as in the country where I obtained it, but at a lower level than in the country where I obtained it, but I had to do additional training, it was not recognised 7.12 Was it difficult to get your non-eu qualification recognised? 16

7.14 Is the profession that you exercise regulated or unregulated in the Member State where you work? ( regulated profession : a professional activity to which access is limited to those with specific professional qualifications, e.g. professions with professional associations, such as accountants, lawyers, notaries, dentists) Regulated Unregulated 7.15 How long did it take to get your qualification recognised? Under 1 month 1-3 months 4-6 months Over 6 months 7.16 Did you use a third party to help with the recognition of qualifications and the authorities? E.g. a lawyer or specialised firm. 7.18 In the field of recognition of qualifications obtained outside the EU, which of the following initiatives would you welcome the most? An easier system of recognition of qualifications at EU level for non-eu qualifications Increased cooperation between national accreditation systems Increased transparency on national procedures A better use of the qualifications frameworks to support recognition (where these exist) further action Other 17