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What the mobility deal between the EU and India will mean for skilled workers

Claudia Delpero, Europe Street
Claudia Delpero, Europe Street - editorial@thelocal.com
What the mobility deal between the EU and India will mean for skilled workers
This photograph shows European Union flags outside the Berlaymont building, the headquarters of the European Commission, in Brussels. Photo by Nicolas TUCAT / AFP

As part of the landmark trade agreement announced on January 27th, the EU and India adopted a ‘mobility framework’ that aims to make it easier for Indian students, researchers and young professionals to move to the EU.

The EU and India have a long history of collaboration. Bilateral ties were established in 1962 and a comprehensive trade agreement has been in discussion since 2004, think tank Bruegel recalls. In 2016, the EU and India adopted a Common Agenda on Migration and Mobility (CAMM) focusing on skilled workers and social security.

The memorandum of understanding signed in January, however, includes “provisions on mobility of professionals, which are among most ambitious to which each party has committed in the past,” a European Commission press release says. What’s in this new agreement?

Skilled workers

The ‘EU-India comprehensive framework of cooperation on mobility’ aims to “facilitate the mobility of skilled workers, young professionals and seasonal workers in shortage sectors while promoting research and innovation,” the Commission says. As migration policy is national competence, it will only apply to interested EU Member States.

The mobility deal includes provisions to support “skills development and compare skills and qualification frameworks” especially “in critical tech areas”.

Students and academics

The Commission also says that the agreement will “strengthen mobility exchanges of students, academics and researchers” through EU programmes such as the Union of Skills (for lifelong learning), Erasmus+, and Marie Skłodowska-Curie Actions (for doctoral education), as well as India’s Scheme for Promotion of Academic and Research Collaboration (SPARC).

The Telegraph India quotes India foreign secretary Vikram Misri saying that the EU-India memorandum of understanding will facilitate “long-stay visas and resident permits for Indian nationals for studies for at least one year”. “If there are longer periods of study, they go back to individual member states,” he added. The same would apply for researchers.

The agreement will also explore options for the association of India to Horizon Europe, the EU’s flagship research programme.

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European Legal Gateway Office

As part of the deal, the European Commission will open the first European Legal Gateway Office in India. The office will help Indian workers, students and researchers to find out about opportunities in Europe, starting with the ICT sector.

Another stated objective is to “make full use of the EU Talent Pool IT platform,” a portal that is being developed to match vacancies in shortage occupations in EU countries with non-EU jobseekers.

Business and professional services

An Indian government press release adds that the agreement “provides a facilitative and predictable framework for business mobility covering short-term, temporary and business travel in both directions”. This concerns intra-corporate transferees, contractual service suppliers, and independent professionals.

“The framework eases movement of employees (and their spouses and dependents) of Indian corporates established in the EU in all services sectors,” a note by India’s Ministry of Commerce explains.

“For business entities aiming to provide services under a contract to EU clients, India can access 37 sub-sectors including IT, business, and professional services. Independent professionals intending to provide services to EU clients get certainty in 17 sub-sectors … covering IT, R&D, and higher education…” the note adds.

India and the EU have also agreed to take steps to enable social security agreements in five years with all the EU Member States.

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'Good for our economies'

European Commission president Ursula von der Leyen said about the deal: “Our greatest wealth is our people. That is why I am glad that we are signing an agreement on mobility… This is good for our economies. This is good for the friendship between our people. This openness benefits us all.”

A blog post published by the European Centre for Development Policy Management (ECDPM), a think tank in Brussels, says that “the human element is perhaps the most vital enabler” of the overall EU-India trade agreement. “By streamlining visas for students, researchers and tech talent, and launching a pilot European Legal Gateway Office, the agreement aims to bridge the skills gap that often hinders deep technological integration,” authors argued.

The EU-India agreement has to be ratified by EU member states, the European parliament and the Indian cabinet before it enters into force.

Data provided by the Indian government show that at the end of 2024 almost one million (931,607) Indian citizens were living in the EU. Indian nationals are the largest group of EU Blue Cards holders and among the top recipients of the Erasmus Mundus scholarships. They were also the first to access the ‘cascade’ visa scheme, a long-term visa that rewards travellers with an established travel history and allows multiple entries to the EU/Schengen area over a long period of time.

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Comments (6)

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Ramo
Some interesting comments on this article… I’ve met top engineers, dumb as a rock engineers and everything in between from multiple nationalities. It’s ultimately the responsibility of hiring team to make sure they get the candidates they need. It’s the responsibility of managers to keep on or not people who are underperforming. Let’s be clear: saying nation x has bad engineers is racist and not acceptable.
Aditya Das
Funny how most of the comments keep complaining about Indian immigrants to EU when at the end, most people commenting here are immigrants themselves. And unlike immigrants from other countries, Indian immigrants everywhere, the UK, Germany and the United States are the wealthier group of non-citizens present in a country, often surpassing the wealth of the citizens. Complaining about the skills of Indian engineers is horrifyingly laughable, when it is well known that Indian has some of the best engineering institutes in the world (IITs and NITs).
Jack (the real jack)
Paul - Yes, it seems you have been betrayed by your own 'government'. India has 1.5 billion people - three times the population of the EU. It can easily export 50 million or 100 million so called 'skilled workers' to the EU. Expect to see a flood (like Canada). The current US administration figured this out and placed a $100K fee on H1-B visas. Their experience is generally low-skill - service desk jobs in India, and button pressing on Microsoft of Cisco products.
Shahan
This is always interesting. The supports of SD and moderates support the party because SD wanted to reduce immigration and promises of jobs going to locals. Well the jobs will still go to non-locals, but locals will be happy that now, instead of previously getting the taxes from foreigners, the taxes will go for the training of foreigners and services outsourced:). The locals are at a significant disadvantage now then before
Jason
I have never met really good Indian engineer in EU. Their CVs are always packed with skills and buzzwords like 'senior' and 'expert,' yet when you actually work with them, they ask basic questions privately through PM about tech they claim to have 10 years of experience in. Conversely, they excel at corporate visibility and reporting, which earns them promotions. Once in power, they tend to practice exclusionary hiring, bringing in engineers only from their own nationality.

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