The Scotsman

End of free movement may not cut migration to UK, Lords warn

● Report says work permit system could produce the ‘worst of all worlds’

- By HAYDEN SMITH

Ending free movement after Brexit may not result in lower migration to the UK, according to a Lords report.

Ministers are yet to outline the details of the proposed immigratio­n system once the country has departed the European Union.

But the scheme is expected to impose restrictio­ns on free movement rules as the government attempts to reduce overall net migration to the tens of thousands.

However, a report from the House of Lords EU home affairs sub-committee raises doubts about the impact of any restoratio­n of national control over EU migration.

It points out that, until the referendum, net migration – the difference between the numbers arriving to live in the country and those leaving – was consistent­ly higher from outside the EU.

This is despite routes from outside Europe being covered by a number of restrictio­ns.

The wide-ranging assessment says: “Restoratio­n of national control over EU migration may or may not, therefore, deliver a reduction in overall net migration.”

In the most recent official figures, covering the year to the end of September, it was revealed that both immigratio­n and net migration from the EU were higher than that for the rest of the world for the first time. Overall net longterm internatio­nal migration was estimated to be 273,000.

The committee also concluded that cutting EU immigratio­n is unlikely to provide a “quick fix” for low wages.

Factors such as the National Minimum Wage, National Living Wage and inflation are more significan­t in driving or impeding real wage growth for low earners, the report argues.

It also warns that extending the work permit system currently used for non-eu nationals to those from the union would disproport­ionately affect some employers’ ability to sponsor EU workers, and could result in labour shortages in areas including the NHS and horticultu­re.

It says any system that is “hedged” with exemptions for particular sectors and schemes could produce the “worst of all worlds, failing to deliver a meaningful reduction in immigratio­n while also proving more onerous and costly for employers, prospectiv­e applicants, and those charged with enforcemen­t”.

The report endorses a “twoway agreement” with the EU on future migration flows, and suggests offering preferenti­al treatment to EU nationals in the UK’S future immigratio­n regime could increase the likelihood of securing a reciprocal approach to UK nationals in the EU.

Baroness Prashar, chair of the committee, said the committee was “struck by the weaknesses and gaps in the UK’S migration statistics”.

 ??  ?? 0 Baroness Prashar: weakness in UK’S migration statistics
0 Baroness Prashar: weakness in UK’S migration statistics

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