Well that's good, because someone has to pick the fruit and veg, after all, right? The farmers are hurting as it is because they can't get the manual labor. So setting a system in place that would bring manual laborers in and set up a win for them would be a win for the farmers.
Medium skilled will be tradespersons., who will need a visa to come to the UK. Usually means they must find a job before they get the visa that allows them to come to the UK.
The MAC said that there is no need for low skilled visas. The UK used to have a Tier 3 visa for the low skilled but it was never used due to the EU's "Free movement".
The UK already has a points based visa caller Tier 5, for some of the low skilled, if they are under age 30 and don't have children. These are a temporary visa for up to 2 years; they can't bring family and cannot have UK benefits, they pay for the visa and pay the IHS.
In the late 90s, I used to live near one of these places that needed seasonal pickers. The wages then were much more than shop workers got, or they would not have got pickers. The pickers early in the season, were mothers who dropped their children off at school and then did 4 hours picking and they said they got double the wage for bank holidays. By the school holidays, the mothers then left and the university students took over, together with those non-EEA citizens on the Tier 5 temporary visas to the UK e.g. Australians and Kiwis. Supply and demand pushed the wages down and put that cost onto the welfare state e.g. benefits like the Tax Credit benefit for those on low income. Universty students and those under UK immigration rules, cannot have benefits.
The UK did say they would end the tax allowance for temporary workers who come for the picking season, as they never pay/paid very litlte in income tax, but used the services. I don't know if their tax allowance has ended, but the UK brought in the 2 child limit for UK benefits so that "Germany, France and Sweden would give more benefits for children". And the new Welfare Reform laws seem to have manged to overturn the European Court of Justice Ruling in a case where these took took the UK to that court, which will end the Child Tax Credit benefit (about £65 per child, per week) going to their children in their own EEA country. Even if they return to the UK to pick and bring their children, under the Welfare reforns, there is a 2 year wait now if they have claimed UK benefits before. All this was planned before the UK voted to leave the EU, as these laws take years to go through.
I assume that means the pickers and others the UK says are low skilled, age 18 - 30, might have the same temporary visa offered that some non-EEA citizens can have???
Some highly skilled enter on a the temporary Tier 5 youth mobilty visa, work in a highly skillled job and then get their employer to sponsor them for a Tier 2 General visas, subject to that visa requirements..