Thursday, August 25, 2011

Net migration total up by a fifth

BBC - Net migration rose by 21% last year, with 239,000 more people arriving in the UK than those leaving, the Office for National Statistics has revealed.

In 2009, the total for net migration had stood at 198,000.

The government has pledged to reduce net migration to the "tens of thousands" by 2015.

As part of that drive, the number of skilled workers from outside the European Economic Area who are allowed into the UK each year is being capped.

ONS estimates put long-term immigration in 2010 at 575,000, up slightly from 567,000 the year before.

But the long-term emigration figure saw a sizeable drop from 371,000 two years ago to 336,000 - the lowest level for six years.

"It's emigration that is, in a sense, the problem for the government at the moment," said BBC home affairs correspondent Danny Shaw.

"Work is the main reason why people leave the UK, and the numbers of people leaving the UK for work reasons is down considerably.

"So what it would seem is that the economy in the rest of the world [and the] lack of opportunities for jobs elsewhere is actually making people not want to leave Britain."

The detail of the ONS figures showed the number of people arriving in the UK for a definite job at a six-year low of 110,000.

Meanwhile, the total leaving the UK for work was at its lowest for three years at 179,000.

Study was the most common reason for entering the UK. Of a total of 228,000 immigrant students last year, three-quarters came from outside the EU.

Net migration into the UK from the so-called A8 countries - the Czech Republic, Poland, Hungary, Slovakia, Slovenia, Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania - jumped to 39,000 from 5,000 in 2009.

The range of figures released by the Office for National Statistics cover the calendar year of 2010, which saw a change of government in May - after an election campaign in which immigration was one of the main areas of debate.

"To be fair to the coalition government, they've only been in power for six months of these figures," our correspondent said.

"So I guess that the figures next year will be more instructive as to the direction of travel and whether they are going to meet their objectives."

Immigration Minister Damian Green said the period covered by the figures predated the government's "radical changes" to the immigration system.

"After almost two years of increasing net migration the figures stabilised in the last quarter," he said.

"This explains why the government radically changed immigration policy, from our first months in office, to drive the numbers down with a limit on economic migration and changes to student visas to ensure we attract the brightest and best whilst tackling widespread abuse of the system."

Government promise

Sir Andrew Green, chairman of Migrationwatch UK which campaigns for tougher controls, said the figures "lay bare the legacy" of the previous Labour government.

"The coalition government will have to face down some vested interests if they are to get anywhere near their target of tens of thousands," he added.

Matt Cavanagh, of the Institute for Public Policy Research think tank, said the figures highlighted stability in the numbers entering the country, alongside a continuing fall in those leaving.

"Politicians shouldn't promise what they can't deliver, particularly on immigration," Mr Cavanagh said.

"Before the election, Conservatives and Liberal Democrats said immigration was out of control; afterwards, they said they would cut it dramatically. Neither was true."



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