BRUSSELS, April 18 — The EU said today it wants to make it easy once again for its young people to live, study and work in Britain, and vice versa—a freedom hit hard by Brexit.

When Britain formally left the European Union in 2020, one of the changes most felt by the bloc’s citizens was that they could no longer move as they wished to the United Kingdom for study or work.

Now, the European Commission says it is time to repair that—at least for those aged 18 to 30 -- and wants the 27 EU nations to approve talks after London expressed interest in youth mobility.

Britain left the European student exchange scheme Erasmus after Brexit, but the commission said that should the UK wish to rejoin, it remained “open” to the idea.

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The Commission’s proposal envisages setting university fees in Britain and the bloc at the same level for EU and UK students, as it was before Brexit.

According to the commission, tuition for non-UK residents at British universities now averages £22,000 (RM131,030) a year, compared to around £9,000 for residents.

The EU said in comparison, the level in the bloc’s universities were “not that high”.

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Under the commission’s plans, young EU and UK citizens would be able to stay in the country of their choice for up to four years and visa fees would not be “excessive”.

Currently a young person from the EU seeking to study in the UK must pay 490 pounds while a skilled worker visa costs between 719 to 1,639 pounds, it said.

There is also an extra cost for healthcare running into the hundreds of pounds that the commission wants to scrap.

Unlike visas for work or study, which are often limited to specific institutions or jobs, the idea would be that young people can be free to move between the UK and EU countries and undertake different activities.

Commission executive vice president Maros Sefcovic said Brexit had hit young people who wanted to study, work and live abroad “particularly hard”.

“Today, we take the first step towards an ambitious but realistic agreement between the EU and the UK that would fix this issue. Our aim is to rebuild human bridges between young Europeans on both sides of the Channel,” he added. — AFP