Recruiter revels at the chance of 'STEALING' British jobs after Brexit
A EUROPEAN job recruiter is revelling in the possibility of “stealing” British employees and moving them to the Continent after Brexit.
Recruiter: STEALING British jobs after Brexit is unique chance
Expat Exit has a database of over 10,000 potential candidates it plans to relocate to companies based in the European Union as Britain leaves the political project.
The firm is working on behalf of European companies to seek out “top professionals” in the UK for employment opportunities on the Continent.
They also offer the opportunity to want away workers hoping to move out Britain after its EU divorce.
Speaking to BBC Radio 4’s Brexit: A Guide for the Perplexed, the company’s boss Marcin Czyza explained his plot.
Brexit news: A recruiter is hoping to poach employees from the UK for EU-based firms
Brexit was a unique chance to steal some sort of well-paid jobs for continental Europe
He said: “I understood it was a unique chance to steal some sort of well-paid jobs for continental Europe, and I see this process is happening.”
Explaining the reason behind peoples’ decisions to move, he added: “Most people have said it is basically two factors.
“First of all, career opportunities. But, also some kind of difficult to describe feeling of not being welcomed.
BBC host slams Bank of England for unreliable predictions
“At the moment, I’ve got more than 10,000 people in my database. We are talking here about top professionals, in some cases, even heads of departments of well-known investment banks from the City. “
Mr Czyza also said he is cashing in on EU-based companies hoping to poach British talent after Brexit.
“I’ve got a lot of requests from European companies who are willing to hire my candidate, including Luxembourg, Germany, Italy, Cyprus and Estonia.
“I am signing recruitment contracts with these companies, so I guess it’s not a short-term project.”
The Bank of England has warned 10,000 jobs could leave the City of London on “day one” after the UK quits the EU.
Sam Woods, the Bank’s Deputy Governor, also admitted forecasts of 75,000 long-term job losses was entirely “plausible”, which are in line with similar claims made by consultancy Oliver Wyman, last year.