A selection of recent media reports

Nicolas Sarkozy threatens to strip citizenship from immigrants who target police
President Nicolas Sarkozy has given warning that France will strip French nationality from any immigrant who uses violen...
Daily Telegraph (30-Jul-2010)
'Immigrants' arrested at care home
Thirteen suspected illegal immigrants have been detained following a raid at a nursing home, the UK Border Agency (UKBA)...
Evening Standard (30-Jul-2010)
UK skills rating sliding
The UK is living on past glories and its economy risks sliding down the international rankings unless the skills of 10.
HRzone.co.uk (30-Jul-2010)
Europe's response to hardline Islam is like a man burning down his house to get rid of an unwanted visitor
I remember an episode of Jerry Springer about a man who, sick of the unwanted sexual attentions of another man, took the...
Telegraph Blogs (30-Jul-2010)
Almost 1,000 wanted criminals on run
Almost 1,000 released prisoners who should have been recalled to jail, including 18 murderers, are at large after the...
Telegraph.co.uk (30-Jul-2010)
100,000 new homes for migrants
Nearly 100,000 new homes must be built every year for immigrants according to ministers. That amounts to four in every....
Sunrise Radio (30-Jul-2010)
Britain to be biggest country in Europe by 2050
Britain will be the biggest country in Europe by 2050, overtaking both France and Germany, according to official project...
Daily Telegraph (30-Jul-2010)
REFUSED ASYLUM SEEKERS HAVE RIGHT TO WORK
FAILED asylum seekers have been told they are allowed to work despite 2.5million jobless Brits struggling on the...
Daily Star (30-Jul-2010)
CAMERON: WE WILL CAP NUMBER OF IMMIGRANTS
A CAP will be imposed on immigration, the Prime Minister vowed yesterday, insisting that voters want more controls over....
Daily Express (30-Jul-2010)
CAMERON IS RIGHT TO BRING IN NEW MIGRATION CONTROLS
THERE seem to be a million and one ways for people from overseas to get into Britain and stay...
Daily Express (30-Jul-2010)
POLICE PROBE MIGRATION RACKET BEHIND 360 SHAM MARRIAGES
A VICAR found guilty yesterday of conducting hundreds of sham marriages is feared to be part of an international...
Scottish Daily Express (30-Jul-2010)
Migrants will end up driving our population higher than Germany's
Britain is destined to become the most heavily populated country in Europe, U.S. experts predicted yesterday.
Mail Online (29-Jul-2010)
VICAR IN MAJOR SHAM MARRIAGES SCAM
A vicar has been found guilty of conducting sham marriages to allow illegal immigrants to stay in...
Daily Star (29-Jul-2010)
Vicar guilty of 360 sham marriages
A vicar has been found guilty of conducting hundreds of sham marriages to help illegal immigrants gain residency in...
Yahoo! News UK & Ireland (29-Jul-2010)
Vicar guilty of conducting 360 sham marriages for illegal African immigrants | Mail Online
A vicar was found guilty today of conducting hundreds of sham marriages to help illegal immigrants gain residency in..
The Mail On Sunday (29-Jul-2010)
Sham marriages on 'unprecedented scale'
The scale of the sham marriages was on an unprecedented scale involving "classic exploitation" of foreign nationals...
The Independent (29-Jul-2010)
Sarkozy accused of racism for ordering closure of illegal gypsy camps after riot | Mail Online
French President Nicolas Sarkozy has been accused of racism after ordering authorities to dismantle 300 gypsy camps...
The Mail On Sunday (29-Jul-2010)
Cameron: Immigration cap won't affect Indian trade
As David Cameron meets Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh in New Delhi on the final day of his trip, he tells Channel....
Channel 4 News (29-Jul-2010)
Two arrested in restaurant raid
IMMIGRATION officers raided an Indian restaurant in Sheffield and arrested two workers on suspicion of being...
Sheffield Telegraph (29-Jul-2010)
Vince Cable's call for immigration cap relaxation is a violation of voters' wishes | Mail Online
The truth is so astonishing that its full implications are hard to comprehend: last year, nearly a third of the...
The Mail On Sunday (29-Jul-2010)

What is the problem?

Introduction

1 The formation of a coalition government changes the political context of the immigration debate as does the admission by prominent Labour politicians that their party did not pay sufficient attention to the issue.

2 However, the essence of the problem remains - namely that government have lost control over our borders during the past fifteen years. This has resulted in immigration on a scale that is placing huge strain on our public services, housing, environment, society and quality of life. This note outlines the problem with references to relevant Briefing Papers.

3 In recent years the focus of attention, particularly by the BBC, has been on migrants from the new Eastern European members of the EU. There has indeed been a massive inflow of nearly one million of whom about half a million are believed to be still in the UK. However, new arrivals are declining and we expect them soon to be counter-balanced by those returning home after spending a few years in Britain. It is not yet clear, however, how the economic crisis in Eastern Europe will affect these flows (Briefing Paper 4.9). The 2008 immigration figures confirmed that net immigration from these countries had fallen to 20,000 as we predicted (Briefing Paper 4.8)

4 Asylum is periodically back in the news with hundreds of mainly young men seeking to cross the channel from Calais but the number of asylum claims is small compared to immigration as a whole. They are now running at about 24,000 a year (2009) – only about 10% of net foreign immigration.

5 The recession is likely to reduce immigration but previous experience suggests that this will be only a temporary phenomenon, after the last three recessions immigration resumed its strong upward trend (Briefing Paper 1.21).

The scale of immigration

6 Foreign immigrants are now arriving at the rate of about ½ million a year - or nearly one a minute. Allowing for those who leave, net foreign immigration reached 330,000 in 2007. It fell to 250,000 in 2008; of this drop of 80,000, nearly 70,000 was due to lower net migration from Eastern Europe. Most of the fall was, therefore, not a result of government policy.

7 Meanwhile British emigration was 87,000 in 2008. This gives a net increase for 2008 of 163,000. These current levels of immigration are far higher than at any time in our history (Briefing Paper 6.1).

The impact of immigration

8 The major impact is on population. The independent Office for National Statistics (ONS) projects that the population of the UK will reach 70 million in 2029 compared to 61.4 today. Nearly all the increase will be in England. 68% will be due to immigration (This is illustrated in the Power Point Presentation accessed from the Home Page. See also http://www.statistics.gov.uk/pdfdir/pproj1009.pdf

9 The latest government household projections show that immigration will account for 39% of all new households in the next 20 years. See http://www.communities.gov.uk/documents/statistics/pdf/1172133.pdf pages 7-8.

10 Meanwhile, there are more than 300 primary schools in which over 70% have English as a second language; this is nearly a half million children. In primary and secondary schools, nearly one million children have English as a second language.

Economic benefit

11 Clearly some migrants bring economic benefit to the UK but, taken as a whole, what they add to production is counter balanced by their addition to the population. The only major inquiry ever conducted in the UK was carried out by the Economic Affairs Committee of the House of Lords in 2007/08. In April 2008 they reported that "We have found no evidence for the argument, made by the government, business and many others, that net immigration - immigration minus emigration - generates significant economic benefits for the existing UK population." As regards the contribution of migrants to the Exchequer, they concluded that "The overall fiscal impact of immigration is likely to be small, though this masks significant variations across different immigrant groups." See http://www.publications.parliament.uk/pa/ld200708/ldselect/ldeconaf/82/8202.htm

12 It is noteworthy that the House of Lords endorsed most of the arguments put forward by Migrationwatch (Briefing Paper 1.18 and Briefing Paper 1.20).

The components of immigration

13 The three major components are:

a) Economic migration

The present government trebled the number of work permits issued from 43,000 in 1997 to 124,000 in 2008. Dependants are additional. It is too early to assess the impact of the Points Based System for work permits introduced in 2008 but there is no sign of a significant reduction in the number issued.

b) Family reunion

The government changed the rules in June 1997 to permit marriage to be used as a means of immigration. The numbers have since risen by 50% to about 42,000 a year.

c) Asylum

The government have sought to tighten the system and have made a number of improvements. However, they are still not removing as many as are rejected each year so the pool of illegal immigrants continues to grow. Applications are currently running at about 25,000 a year.

Illegal immigration

14 There are three main sources of illegal immigration - those who enter illegally on the back of a truck, visitors and students who overstay their visas, and rejected asylum seekers who the authorities fail to remove. In the Autumn of 2009 the press reported extensive exploitation of the student visa system, notably on the Indian sub continent. Its weaknesses are described in Briefing Paper 2.3.

15 In June 2005, a government commissioned study gave a central estimate of the number of illegal immigrants of 430,000. Migrationwatch updated this to 475,000 (Briefing Paper 11.6). In March 2009 a study by the London School of Economics suggested a central estimate of 725,000 of which 518,000 were thought to be in London. Migrationwatch updated this to 1.1 million (Briefing Paper 11.22). The government continue to be opposed to an amnesty - for good reasons (Briefing Paper 11.7).

Policy of Previous Government

16 The massive increase in immigration since 1997 was not the result of "globalisation". It was the result of acts and omissions by the previous government. (Briefing Paper 9.22).

17 The Labour government claimed, correctly, to be introducing the most far-reaching reforms to the immigration system for more than a generation. Unfortunately, they are neither "tough" nor "Australian style". The Australian immigration system starts with a limit and selects within it. The British system has no limits and is not intended to have any. (Briefing Paper 3.3). Migrationwatch have made proposals for toughening this points based system (Briefing Paper 3.5).

Conservative policy

18 The Conservatives have called for an annual limit on work permits and the creation of a border police force. The latter is of secondary significance and the former is of limited effect. A low limit on work permits would constrain the competitiveness of key parts of industry while a high limit would have little effect on population growth. More importantly, they undertook in their 2010 manifesto and in their "contract with voters" to bring the level of net immigration down to the "tens of thousands rather than hundreds of thousands".

Liberal Democrat Policy

19 The Liberal Democrats called for what was, in effect, an amnesty for illegal immigrants and for an immigration system that attracted immigrants to less crowded areas of the UK; there was no mention of limits.

Coalition immigration policy

20 The coalition agreement speaks of an annual limit on non EU economic migration but makes no mention of an overall target range for net immigration. However, at his joint press conference on 20 May 2010 launching the coalition policy document, the Prime Minister said:

"In terms of immigration, what you can see is that there's a cap going to be put in place and, yes, that is with the ambition of getting to levels of net migration that were prevalent in the 80s and 90s, which is tens of thousands not hundreds of thousands."
What should be done?

21 The government should have an explicit and reasoned target range for net immigration, as recommended by the House of Lords, and adjust its immigration policies in line with that broad objective. Secondly, a work permit should not carry with it an almost automatic entitlement to settle. There should be a further points system to select those permitted to settle permanently in the UK. The Labour government accepted the second of these suggestions. But the coalition have not yet pronounced on the point.

22 The broad objective should be to achieve "Balanced Migration" - that is to bring the level of immigration down towards the level of emigration. This is the objective of the Cross Party Group established in September 2008. A fuller account of their proposals can be found at www.balancedmigration.org.

Revised June 2010