On 29th November 2012, the UK's Office of National
Statistics announced that net immigration into the UK had fallen by about 25% to
183,000 in the year to March 2012, from 242,000 in the year to March 2011. Prime
Minister David Cameron welcomed the news He tweeted, 'Effective immigration
helps us compete in the global race'. He added, 'It shows we are reducing net
immigration.' Grant Shapps, the Chairman of Mr Cameron's Conservative Party said
'This big fall in net migration shows that the tough steps we have taken to
reduce the uncontrolled immigration that Labour presided over are
working.'
In 2010, before he became prime minister, Mr Cameron
promised to reduce net immigration to the UK from the then level of around
250,000 a year to 'tens of thousands' annually. Until the latest figures were
released, his government had made no significant progress towards this
goal.
Yesterday, the UK immigration minister, Mark Harper, said '"Our
tough policies are taking effect and this marks a significant step towards
bringing net migration down from the hundreds of thousands to the tens of
thousands by the end of this Parliament,"
Commentators and pressure
groups were quick to comment on the figures. Writing for his blog on the New
Statesman website, George Eaton said that the fall in the headline figure was
not a cause for celebration.
Mr Eaton said that the cause of much of
the reduction was a reduction in the number of foreign students registering to
come to the UK to live. Students from outside the European Economic Area who
want to come to study in the UK must first obtain a Tier 4 student visa. There
was a fall of 19,000 in the number of tier 4 visas issued in the year to March
2012. This, Mr Eaton says, is not good news for the UK. He says 'Estimates
suggest that an annual fall of 20,000 in the number of foreign students, who
account for more than a tenth of higher education income in England, will cost
the economy around £1bn-£1.5bn.'
Mr Eaton said 'There's still little
chance of Cameron meeting his target, but at least he'll be able to boast that
the numbers are going in the right direction.
Sarah Mulley of The
Institute for Public Policy Research told The Daily Telegraph, a London
newspaper, that the fall in the number of student visas may not have represented
a genuine fall in the number of people coming to the UK. It says that the number of
student visitor visas issued has risen by about 8,000 or 12% to 66,569 in the
year ending in September 2012.
Student visitor visas are issued to
students coming to study in the UK for less than one year. Ms Mulley told the
Telegraph that student visitors do not count as migrants for the purposes of net
migration figures but are subject to less rigorous checks than those coming
through the main (tier 4) student visa route.' They may still be coming,
intending to stay.
She warned 'The number of student visitor visas
continues to rise, perhaps because tough action on student visas aimed at
meeting the target has led to a displacement effect. The government needs to be
sure that it has the systems in place to deal with this.'
Analysis of
the figures shows that a further 17,000 of the reduction was caused by a rise in
the number of British residents leaving the UK to live elsewhere. This is
because of the way in which the net immigration figure is
calculated.
The net immigration figure is calculated by first
estimating the number of people entering the country to live over any given
period. Then, in order to calculate the increase in population caused by
immigration over that period, it is necessary to subtract the number of UK
residents who leave the country over the same period. .
In the year
to March 2012, 353,000 UK citizens and residents left the country to live
elsewhere, 17,000 more than in the year to March 2011. The fall of the number of
people coming to live in the UK from outside the EU fell by only 17,000 in the
year to March 2012.
The Director General of the UK's Institute of
Directors, Simon Walker, said 'The current approach to migration risked
deterring international students, damaging our Higher Education sector and
giving the impression that Britain is not open to talent from across the world.
We support the Government's desire to crack down on the minority of bogus
students, but legitimate students are also being put off."
A poll of
Institute of Directors members found that 62% say that reducing the number of
international students in the UK could damage their business by reducing an
important supply of skills and 80% think that international students will help
the UK to build commercial links with their home countries.
Global Visa Support
offers a variety of programs in United Kingdom. Please visit our
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