Interesting piece from the The Times.
Of course, any newspaper can find a few people to quote and conclude that a trend is underway…but there’s a logic to what is said here.
http: / /www .timesonline .co .uk /tol /news /uk /article3378851 .ece
Some quotes:
“Jarek Djano looked back six years to when he first arrived in England from the small village of Zamrow. “Each pound I sent back home could buy three or four loaves of bread. Now it can buy only one,” he said.
“Now I have to work six, seven days a week. Before I only worked five. It’s getting to be a strain on my wallet.”
“Inquiries from householders fell by 40 per cent in the last quarter of 2007, a result of the economic situation, the Federation of Master Builders said. “Consumers are being much more cautious about home improvement,” a spokesman said. “I’m expecting the results for the first quarter to be worse than the last three months of last year. We think it’s a direct result of the credit squeeze. The public’s uncertain about what’s going to happen with the economy and in these periods people hold back on working on their houses.
“Poland, by contrast, is enjoying a construction boom. Profits at PBG, a Polish building company, rose by two thirds in the fourth quarter of 2007 as the country prepares to host the 2012 European football championships. An expected 500,000 visitors have led to a massive renovation of the country’s sports complexes, road, airport and rail infrastructures, and tourist facilities. Polish builders are in high demand. “Lots of people are going back for Euro 2012,” Darek Osiak, 26, a gardener from Warsaw, said. “There’s building going on already. The economy is growing and people are very confident.”
£1 equals 7.23 Polish zloty (2004)
£1 equals 4.83 Polish zloty (2008)
But it’s worth noting the quote from head of marketing at Reed Employment who says the number of Poles entering the UK market is still strong.
So, what are the consequences of this, I wonder?
It’s got to be good for Poland where there is now a shortage of labour in many skilled areas - notably construction. And Polish corporate gross wages were up 11.5% the stats office says today. Meanwhile inflation is on the rise – 4.3% - and GDP growth is set to slow. More labour = less wage rise pressure, which is good for inflation.
More demand for Polish housing from these returnees?
And for the UK? I suspect others will follow where the Poles have led. The question is will they stay when they find the UK in the grip of economic pessimism at the least and a recession at worst?
The real state of affairs right now though is fairly hard to see, in my view. That picture will probably be a whole lot clearer in six to nine months time.
I wonder what others think?
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