Net migration rises by 36%, official figures show
26 February BBC
The level of net migration into the UK rose by 36% last year, Office
for National Statistics figures show.An estimated 572,000 people entered
the UK on a long-term basis in the year to June 2010 while 346,000
emigrated. Ministers want to reduce net migration levels, the difference
between the two figures, to tens of thousands by 2015.
To help do this, the coalition plans to cap immigration from outside
the European Union, a plan Labour says is “the worst of all worlds”.
According to the ONS figures, net migration figures - which include
asylum seekers and people whose decide to stay longer than originally
intended - have been rising steadily since December 2008. While the
number of people settling in the UK on a long-term basis has fallen
slightly, this has offset by a sharp fall in the number leaving. Figures
released on Thursday also show that of migrants granted settlement, the
number of asylum-related cases went up to 5,125, compared with 3,110 in
2009. The number of work-related cases was also up, rising 4% to 84,370
compared with 81,185 the previous year.
Economic slowdown The number of foreign nationals given UK passports
was down 4% to 195,130, but the figure remained higher than that seen in
the years 2005 to 2007, the ONS said.
A total of 334,815 student visas were issued last year, down 2% on
2009, and asylum applications were down by more than a quarter to 17,790
last year, compared with 24,485 in 2009. This is the lowest level of
asylum applications since 1989.
Immigration Minister Damian Green said: “These statistics reinforce
once again why we are radically reforming the immigration system to
bring net migration down to the tens of thousands by the end of this
Parliament.”
But Donna Covey, head of the Refugee Council, said she was “greatly
concerned” more than one in four refusals in asylum cases were
overturned at appeal.
“We know the government is looking at improving the decision-making
process for asylum cases, but they must do so as a matter of urgency to
ensure that those in need of protection are not returned to countries
where their lives are at risk,” she said.Separate figures, published for
the first time by the ONS, suggest 2009’s economic slowdown had a
dramatic impact on the number of people coming to England and Wales to
work for less than 12 months.
An estimated 97,000 overseas residents visited the UK for short-term
work-related purposes in the year to mid-2009, down from 162,000 the
previous year - a reduction of 40%.There was also a 33% drop in
short-term work-related migration from Poland to England and Wales in
2009, the figures suggest.
Immigration cap The government hopes the non-EU immigration cap will
have a big impact on reducing net migration levels.
This will be split into monthly allocations with a total of 4,200
available for the first month in April, with 1,500 each month after that
- a total of 20,700, but high earners and people entering the country on
company transfers will be exempt.Labour has branded the cap “the worst
of all worlds”, saying it will harm scientific research and fail to
limit immigration from within the EU, which the UK has little control
over.Research by pollsters Ipsos Mori suggests 75% of Britons believe
immigration is currently a problem, with strong support for the
government’s plan to introduce an annual cap on the number of non-EU
workers coming into the UK.
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