Why immigration is a major issue in Britain's election
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[June 05, 2024]
LONDON (Reuters) - British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak is
promising to cut immigration levels if his Conservative Party wins next
month's election, making the issue one of the major battlegrounds of the
upcoming vote.
Sunak hopes the issue will distinguish his party from the opposition
Labor Party, which is currently ahead by more than 20 points in opinion
polls.
THE IMMIGRATION ISSUE
Immigration has long been a major political question in Britain, with
voters expressing concern that large influxes put excess pressure on
housing, education and the state-run National Health Service, as well as
damaging social cohesion.
In 2010, Conservative then-prime minister David Cameron pledged to bring
net migration back to tens of thousands a year, a target he never came
close to reaching.
Ending the free movement of people into Britain from other European
countries was a major factor that led to the 2016 vote to leave the
European Union, with those championing Brexit promising it would help
bring back control of Britain's borders.
However, net migration, which reached 329,000 in 2015, has continued to
rise.
THE LATEST FIGURES
According to the most recent official figures in May, the provisional
total for 2023 showed net immigration of 685,000, down from a record
high of 764,000 in 2022. That drop was largely due to a fall in the
numbers moving to the UK from Hong Kong and Ukraine under humanitarian
visa programs.
Indian nationals were by far the largest nationality coming to the UK
last year, accounting for about a fifth of overall immigration, followed
by Nigerian and Chinese citizens.
The government said the migration rises were partly the result of the
arrival of more students and people working in the care sector along
with their dependents.
In January, Sunak introduced new rules to slash the numbers coming in by
300,000 by stopping international students bringing in family members,
increasing the salary threshold for skilled worker visas by 48% to
38,700 pounds ($49,000), and restricting care workers from bringing in
dependents.
The government said last month this had led to 79% fewer student
dependent applications in the first four months of 2024, 30,000 fewer
student visa applications compared to the same period the year before,
and a 58% fall in applications by dependents of people working in the
health and care sector.
WHAT ARE BENEFITS AND COSTS OF IMMIGRATION?
Experts say it is difficult to assess the benefits and costs of
immigration. While a rise in migration adds to the demand on public
services, migrants will also pay taxes and provide other economic
benefits.
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Two inflatable dinghies carrying migrants make their way towards
England in the English Channel, Britain, May 4, 2024. REUTERS/Chris
J. Ratcliffe/File Photo/File Photo
Critics of high immigration say it depresses wages, while rapid
demographic change impacts society and makes integration almost
impossible. They point to a 2018 report that suggested the net cost
of immigration was more than 4 billion pounds in the financial year
2016/17.
However, a 2022 report by the Migration Observatory at the
University of Oxford said the fiscal impact of migration to the UK
was small but dependent on the migrants' circumstances.
Some studies have shown foreign workers had little or no impact on
overall wage or employment levels, and Britain's acute shortage of
candidates to fill vacancies was a problem for many company bosses.
Rain Newton-Smith, head of the Confederation of British Industry,
said on Tuesday the overall needs of the economy had to be
considered, such as in relation to skills shortages, rather than a
simple focus on net migration figures.
ELECTION PROMISES
Sunak says if he wins the election, he will cap work and family
visas at a yearly level agreed by parliament.
Leading Brexit campaigner Nigel Farage, now leader of the right-wing
Reform Party, which polls suggest is sucking votes away from Sunak's
Conservatives, says net migration should fall to zero.
The opposition Labor Party says it would also lower net migration by
reducing reliance on overseas workers, addressing the shortage of
home-grown skills, and tackling rogue employers.
SMALL BOATS ACROSS THE CHANNEL
The issue over legal migration is separate to the equally
politically contentious issue of stopping asylum seekers arriving in
Britain without permission across the Channel from Europe in small
boats.
Sunak's scheme to send those arriving this way to Rwanda has failed
to get off the ground before the election while Labor says it will
scrap the policy.
More than 29,000 people arrived on small boats last year, after a
record 45,775 in 2022. This year, more than 10,000 people have
already made the Channel crossing.
Britain is spending more than three billion pounds a year on
processing asylum applications, with the cost of housing migrants
awaiting a decision in hotels and other accommodation running at
about eight million pounds a day.
($1 = 0.7830 pounds)
(Reporting by Michael Holden, Editing by William Maclean)
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