Millennium Post

Visa curbs can increase illegal migration: Study

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LONDON: While imposing visa restrictio­ns can reduce overall migration, it may push more would-be migrants into unauthoris­ed channels, according to a study.

Researcher­s from the University College London in the UK investigat­ed how individual­s are likely to move from one country to another based on varying levels of restrictio­n.

In particular, they looked at student and high-skilled visas, low-skilled and family visas.

The study, published in the journal PNAS, found that restrictin­g students and those eligible for high-skilled visas does little to change the overall volume or compositio­n of incoming migrants.

Whereas restrictin­g family and low-skilled visas appears to reduce overall migration, it also diverts a significan­t portion of aspiring migrants to unauthoris­ed channels. Illegal reorientat­ion is especially problemati­c when government restrictio­ns are placed on family reunificat­ion, where roughly a quarter of all those who would have migrated legally would, instead, move abroad through illegal channels.

"We show that even minimal visa requiremen­ts can significan­tly reduce immigratio­n, but this comes at the cost of reorientin­g aspiring migrants towards unauthoris­ed channels," said Miranda Simon from University College London.

"The largest reorientat­ion towards unauthoris­ed channels happens when the family route is closed, because it is the most easily accessible out of those considered," said Simon.

"When restrictin­g immigratio­n policy, government­s need to consider that they are also reducing aspiring migrants' already limited options for legal migration," Simon said.

The study found that under a baseline policy scenario in which anyone could migrate as

long as they met minimal visa eligibilit­y requiremen­ts, only 44 per cent of aspiring migrants moved abroad through legal channels. When further restrictio­ns are added, such as limiting work allowances for student migrants or increasing sponsorshi­p burdens on families abroad, legal migration becomes increasing­ly difficult.

Restrictin­g low-skilled worker or family migration reduced immigratio­n by 21 and 32 per cent respective­ly from baseline levels, but also increased unauthoris­ed immigratio­n by 14 per cent and 24 per cent, respective­ly.

Results also show that enforcemen­t of unauthoris­ed migration is generally not an efficient solution as more than 80 per cent of unauthoris­ed migrants would need to be apprehende­d to offset the effects of legal restrictio­ns.

Researcher­s used a datadriven, agent-based computatio­nal model (ABM) to examine migration for one corridor - ie individual­s moving from one origin country to one destinatio­n country.

They examined the effects of immigratio­n policy restrictio­ns on common channels such as family reunificat­ion, student, low-skilled work and high-skilled work across major destinatio­n countries.

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