The Chronicle

Brexit takes toll on EU migration

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NET migration from outside the EU has hit the highest level in nearly 15 years, as a post-Brexit plunge in arrivals from the bloc continued, new figures reveal.

Overall, the balance between the numbers arriving in and leaving the UK remained above 250,000 – nearly three times the Government’s target level of below 100,000.

Office for National Statistics data showed that 261,000 more non-EU citizens came to the country than left in the year ending September 2018.

This was the highest estimate since 2004. EU net migration continued to add to the UK’s population, but it almost halved yearon-year to 57,000 – a level last seen in 2009.

Overall, around 283,000 more people moved to the UK with an intention to stay 12 months or more than left.

Jay Lindop, deputy director of the ONS Centre for Internatio­nal Migration, said: “Different patterns for EU and non-EU migration have emerged since mid-2016, when the EU referendum vote took place.”

The figures showed that, in the year to September, 627,000 people moved to the UK, while 345,000 emigrated.

The ONS analysis suggests net migration, immigratio­n and emigration figures have remained broadly stable since the end of 2016.

In the last period, 15,000 more nationals from the so-called EU8 states – Czech Republic, Estonia, Hungary, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland, Slovakia and Slovenia – departed than arrived.

This recent pattern differs to those from other EU countries, where statistici­ans said they have continued to see more people arriving than leaving.

The outflow of EU nationals has jumped sharply since the referendum, standing at an estimated 145,000 in the latest period.

Meanwhile, there has been a gradual increase in immigratio­n of non-EU citizens over the past five years. Year-on-year, net migration from Asia went up by around 40,000 to 185,000, including 28,000 from south-east Asia – almost double the level 12 months earlier. Both of these were “statistica­lly significan­t” increases.

Madeleine Sumption, director of the Migration Observator­y at the University of Oxford, said: “The overall story the data tell on EU migration is clear – Britain is not as attractive to EU migrants as it was a couple of years ago.

“EU net migration happened to be unusually high in the run-up to the referendum, so at least some of this decline would probably have happened anyway even without Brexit.”

Shadow home secretary Diane Abbott said: “The data confirms the fakery behind the Government’s immigratio­n policy.

“Once again the number of migrants coming here vastly outstrips its unworkable 100,000 net migration target.”

The figures are the first official migration statistics published since the Government revealed proposals for the post-Brexit immigratio­n system in December.

 ??  ?? Diane Abbott
Diane Abbott

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