'Australian-Style' Points System Leads To Higher Immigration Than In UK

'Brexit' camp's big idea undermined by Australia, US and Canada says Remain
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Countries that have adopted an "Australian-style" immigration system have higher levels of immigration than the UK, official figures suggest.

'Brexit' campaigners Boris Johnson and Michael Gove today outlined plans to introduce a points-based immigration system if the UK votes to leave the European Union on June 23.

Ending the automatic right of EU citizens to come to live and work in the UK, the policy would mean those let in would be determined by skills and qualifications and “without discrimination on the ground of nationality”.

The Vote Leave campaign plan is a response to fears over uncontrolled immigration from being an EU member. Net migration to the UK is annually above 333,000, which critics say is unsustainable - though 196,000 is due to non-EU citizens. 

But official United Nations figures show immigration per head is higher than the UK in Australia, the United States and Canada - countries that already follow a points-based regime.

In 2015, 13.2% off the UK population was from "international migrant stock". By contrast, the proportion was 28.6% in Australia, 22.6% in Canada and 14.7% in the US - all higher than the UK.

Damian Green, Conservative MP for Ashford, told HuffPost UK: “It is disappointing that Vote Leave are aping UKIP’s favourite migration policy – even more so when the evidence shows it doesn’t even work.

“Vote Leave want Britain to pull out of the Single Market, costing jobs and leaving families worse off – all to try and bring down immigration. Yet their proposed system could cause immigration to rise, not fall.

“British people rightly expect a fair immigration system. Leaving Europe will not deliver that, and will be a leap in the dark that we cannot afford.”

Caroline Lucas, Green MP for Brighton Pavilion, said: “Vote Leave are all over the place on immigration.

"They say to some communities that they want more immigrants to come to Britain but simultaneously copy UKIP’s nasty Trump-style politics of division.

“EU migrants make a huge contribution to our society, with over 250,000 working in our vital public services. It’s a disgrace that Vote Leave are using them as political footballs.

“Britain is fairer, safer and greener in Europe. Following Vote Leave’s dangerous and divisive policies would be a risk we cannot afford to take."

Two years ago, Johnson said: "Why shouldn't we have some sort of points-based system, such as they have in America or Australia, why shouldn't we have that?”

The UK already has a points system for migrants outside the EU, broken down in to four "tiers" ranging from "high-value" workers to those here temporarily. 

But for citizens of EU states, barring temporary restrictions for some new member states, migrants have freedom to work in the UK.

The anti-immigration Migration Watch has said the points-based regime is “totally unsuitable” for the UK, arguing it is trying to increase its population through "growth by immigration".

The Civitas think thank, cited by Vote Leave, has said that the Australian-system could lead to more EU migrants coming in to the UK than now, since it would permit plumbers, electricians and builders.

“What (Australian points based system) would not do is reduce the kinds of migration that many voters seem concerned with," wrote author Jonathan Lindsell.

"The points based system ‘skilled occupations list’ includes not only surgeons and engineers (whom we already let in) but plumbers, electricians, builders. Many EU/EEA applicants would, then, still qualify."

Under the Australian system, migrants are only granted skilled migration visas if they pass a points test based on what type of job they do, their age, English language skills, previous employment and education.

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Boris Johnson has backed the American and Australia points system
Ben Birchall/PA Wire

A statement from Johnson, Gove, Priti Patel, and Gisela Stuart said today: “By the next general election, we will create a genuine Australian-style points-based immigration system.

“The automatic right of all EU citizens to come to live and work in the UK will end, as will EU control over vital aspects of our social security system.

“EU citizens will be subject to legislation made by those we elect in Westminster, not in Brussels. We could then create fairness between EU citizens and others, including those from Commonwealth countries.”

Before You Go

The EU and immigration: the facts
The Australian system is designed to increase immigration(01 of08)
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Currently, the points-style system that Leave campaigners have called for is only applied to people immigrating from outside the EU.

But the think tank Migration Watch has said this approach would be "totally unsuitable" for the UK because Australia is trying to increase its population through "growth by immigration" - quite the opposite of the UK.

A press release from Migration Watch in 2014 said: "The Australian context could hardly be more different. Many Australians believe that they have a strategic need to grow and have the space to do so. Both major parties [in the country] favour increased legal migration and their PBS is a means to that end... Furthermore, net immigration to Australia is proportionately three times higher than ours as the Australian Government pursue their strategy of population growth through immigration."
(credit:ASSOCIATED PRESS)
There aren't 1.5 million 'extra' EU migrants(02 of08)
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The Telegraph claimed on 12 May that ONS data showed an "extra" 1.5 million EU migrants came to Britain over last five years without counting among official statistics. Immigration estimates in February suggested around 257,000 EU nationals migrated to the UK in the year to September 2015. Yet 655,000 National Insurance (NI) numbers were issued to EU nationals looking to work or claim benefits in the UK over the same period.

Full Fact says the difference can be explained by the fact that the ONS only counts someone as an immigrant if they intend to stay longer than a year, in line with a UN definition. If they intend to stay for a shorter time they are counted as a short-term immigrant or visitor. This doesn't prove there are 'extra' hidden migrants, Full Fact argues.
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More people come to the UK from outside the EU than from inside it(03 of08)
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And that has always been the case, according to Full Fact. But the gap is closing: the number of EU migrants has soared while non-EU migrants has fallen. The most recent figures put net migration from EU countries at 184,000 a year and non-EU just above at 188,000. (credit:Full Face)
EU migration is at a record high(04 of08)
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EU-only net migration was 184,000 in 2015, equalling its record high. David Cameron had promised to bring net migration down to below 100,000. (credit:Regis Duvignau / Reuters)
But Brexit wouldn't bring us anywhere near the Government's immigration target(05 of08)
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The Government has said it wants net migration to be in the “tens of thousands” - rather than the record high of 333,000 in 2015. Some experts say Brexit would make little difference to reaching this target, given that the recent figures put net migration of non-EU citizens at 188,000. According to the Migration Observatory, an impartial research group at the University of Oxford, even if we left the European Union - assuming we kept the current economic conditions and policies - "Brexit alone would not sufficient to bring the target within reach." (credit:ASSOCIATED PRESS)
EU migrants come to work(06 of08)
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The vast majority of EU migrants in 2015 said they were coming to the UK for work - and 41% said they already had a job arranged. By contrast, most non-EU migrants (47%) say they have come to study, according to Full Fact. (credit:ASSOCIATED PRESS)
It's not clear what would replace our EU membership(07 of08)
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"Probably the greatest challenge in assessing the impacts of EU exit on migration is the fact that we do not yet know what kind of relationship would replace EU membership," writes an expert for the UK in a Changing Europe Initiative, an impartial project based at King’s College London.

"On the one hand, it is possible that the UK’s membership of the EU would be replaced by an association agreement of some kind that included free movement," the post reads. "Norway and Switzerland, for example, have both implemented free movement as part of their economic cooperation agreements with the EU. If this happened in the UK, the impacts of Brexit on UK migration could be relatively limited.

"On the other hand, EU withdrawal could mean the end of free movement and the introduction of admission requirements for EU citizens who want to live and work in the UK. These could take various forms, but the most obvious scenario is that EU citizens would face the same rules as non-EU citizens."
(credit:Adam Berry via Getty Images)
Brexit may not mean any change to immigration(08 of08)
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If the UK votes to leave the EU, a major consideration would be whether we could remain in the single market - something some economists consider essential to our prosperity. Non-partisan think tank Open Europe says that having some kind of free trade agreement with the EU would be "vital" in the event of Brexit. It argues that the example of Norway and Switzerland - which are not in the EU but have trade arrangements suggest that keeping the principle of EU free movement may be the "price" the UK has to pay to keep our free market arrangement. Switzerland trying to negotiate migrant rules while keeping its trade agreement "without much joy so far," according to the think tank. (credit:The Sun/PA Wire)