David Cameron has been sharply criticised over his announcement of immigrant benefit curbs amid fears of an influx of Romanians and Bulgarians in the new year.
The Prime Minister was accused of "hysteria" by the European employment commissioner Laszlo Andor, who said he risked making Britain the "nasty country" of the EU.
The Romanian ambassador Ion Jinga has told Sky News the majority of EU migrants did not claim benefits.
Under the new rules announced by Mr Cameron today, EU migrants are to be barred from claiming out-of-work benefits, such as Jobseeker's Allowance, for their first three months in the UK.
Those who do go on to claim the benefits will now only be able to get payments for a maximum of six months. Migrants caught sleeping rough could be deported and would not be allowed to return to the UK for 12 months.
The moves have been sparked by a January 1 deadline when Romanians and Bulgarians will be entitled to come to the UK for work and can then claim benefits like other EU citizens.
Defending the move Mr Cameron told Sky News: "We we are doing is looking around Europe and seeing what steps other countries are taking to make sure people are allowed to come and work but are not allowed to just come and claim benefits.
There are doubts over how quickly Mr Cameron could introduce the new rules"The steps we are taking are already being taken in Germany and Holland and elsewhere and I believe they are fair; fair for people in Britain who work hard and want to do the right thing."
Other measures include fines of up to £20,000 for firms that pay below the minimum wage - an attempt to prevent undercutting of British workers.
Dozens of Conservative MPs want the Government to ignore EU law and extend existing controls on when new arrivals can claim the same benefits at UK citizens until 2018.
Currently some immigrants can access Jobseeker's Allowance within a month of arrival in the UK, according to Downing Street aides.
However, the Government's own figures for 2011/12 show that only 7% of those claiming Job Seeker's Allowance, Employment and Support Allowance, Incapacity Benefit or Income Support were foreigners and only 31% of those were from within the EU.
A University College London report earlier this month found that immigrants had contributed £25bn to the UK economy between 2000 and 2011 - significantly more than they had claimed in handouts. They were also 45% less likely to receive benefits than British people.
Questions have been raised on how quickly Mr Cameron could introduce the new rules, given the impending January 1 deadline.
He has insisted that the six-month limit and the 12-month bar on returns could be brought in under existing legislation but the three-month delay on claiming benefits would need legislation, which is to be brought forward to early in the new year.
Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg said the Liberal Democrats were behind the tougher rules and called them "sensible and reasonable reforms".
"The right to work does not automatically mean the right to claim," Mr Clegg said.
In his criticism, Mr Andor accused Mr Cameron of not presenting the "full truth" about the issue and suggested the reaction in the UK was based on "hysteria".
"The unilateral action, unilateral rhetoric, especially if it is happening at this time, is not really helpful because it risks presenting the UK as the kind of nasty country in the European Union," Mr Andor told the BBC.
"We don't want that. We have to look into the situation collectively and if there are real problems react proportionately."
And the Romanian ambassador told Sky News: "More than 1.5m Britons live and work in another EU member state, Romania included, and when speaking about benefits abuse … there are very few cases where Romanians have been involved in abusing the British benefits system."
Nigel Farage, the leader of the UK Independence Party, said: "These measures fall way short of what the British public want though. Our borders will remain open. Migrants will still be entitled to out-of-work benefits after just three months. It isn't nearly good enough."
Shadow home secretary Yvette Cooper said the Prime Minister was "playing catch-up" after failing to take action earlier.
"Why has it taken him eight months to copy Labour's proposal to make the Habitual Residence Test stronger and clearer?" she said.
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