The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

‘Brexodus’ under way as net migration tumbles

Surge in number of EU nationals leaving UK since last year’s Brexit vote

- GARETH MCPHERSON POLITICAL REPORTER gmcpherson@thecourier.co.uk

The UK is suffering a “Brexodus” as the number of EU nationals leaving the country hits the highest level for nearly a decade.

Net migration with the Brussels bloc for the year to March is estimated at 127,000 – a drop of 51,000, according to official figures.

That fall was driven by 33,000 EU nationals leaving the UK.

Liberal Democrat leader Vince Cable described it as a “deeply worrying Brexodus of EU citizens who have made the UK their home”.

Total net migration, which also includes movements between the UK and non-EU countries, is now at 246,000, a fall of 81,000 on the previous year.

That is the lowest since the year ending March 2014.

Official Tory policy is for the difference between those entering the country and those leaving to not exceed 100,000.

The UK Government welcomed the drop but said there is “still more work to do to bring net migration down further to sustainabl­e levels”.

The SNP said the surge in EU nationals departing is a damning indictment of the “Tory Government’s extreme approach to Brexit and immigratio­n”.

Stuart McDonald, the SNP MP, said Holyrood must have powers over immigratio­n to meet Scotland’s needs.

“By driving away the very EU workers that our key industries and public services rely on, the UK Government threatens to make businesses unviable in a reckless act of self-sabotage to the economy,” he said.

“The UK’s three million EU nationals make a valued and valuable contributi­on to the country – without them we would have an acute labour shortage, and as a result the whole country would be poorer and worse off.”

Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn said the NHS was facing recruitmen­t problems due to the lack of EU workers.

He added: “People move for lots of reasons – our public services would not have survived if there hadn’t been a lot of people who had come from all parts of the world and made a massive contributi­on to all of our living standards.”

Jonathan Portes, professor of economics and public policy at King’s College London, said the figures from the Office for National Statistics “confirm that Brexit is having a significan­t impact on migration flows, even before we have left the EU or any changes are made to law or policy”.

He added: “EU nationals, both those already here and those considerin­g a move to the UK, are understand­ably concerned about their future status in the UK.”

Immigratio­n minister Brandon Lewis said: “The fall in net migration – for the third quarter in succession – is encouragin­g but we are not complacent.

“There is still more work to do to bring net migration down further to sustainabl­e levels.

“People who come to our country to work bring significan­t benefits to the UK, but there is no consent for uncontroll­ed immigratio­n.”

Migration Watch UK said although it is a “step forward”, there is still nearly a quarter of a million more people coming into the UK than leaving, which has “massive implicatio­ns for the scale and nature of our society”.

 ?? Picture: Paul Smith. ?? Eastern Europeans working at a fruit farm in Angus.
Picture: Paul Smith. Eastern Europeans working at a fruit farm in Angus.

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