Yorkshire Post

Numbers moving to UK from non-EU nations hits high

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THE NUMBER of people moving to the UK long term from non-EU countries has hit a new record high, according to the latest estimates.

Last year, immigratio­n from non-EU countries rose to 404,000, the highest it has ever been since records began in 1975 when it was 93,000, data from the Office for National Statistics (ONS) shows.

Net migration from outside the EU, the balance between the number of people entering and leaving the country, is also at its highest level (282,000) since citizenshi­p informatio­n was first collected in 1975 (40,000).

Both figures have continued to rise since 2013.

Meanwhile, EU net migration fell to 49,000, down from 75,000 recorded a year earlier and after hitting peaks of more than 200,000 in 2015.

The ONS report said this was the “result of a decrease in the number of EU migrants arriving in the UK with the intention of staying for 12 months or more for work-related reasons.”

Overall net migration stood at 270,000, up from 232,000 for the same period in 2018, taking into account the number of British people who have emigrated.

Jay Lindop, director of the Centre for Internatio­nal Migration at the ONS, said in the year to December “non-EU migration was at the highest level we have seen, driven by a rise in students from China and India, while the number of people arriving from EU countries for work has steadily fallen”.

Immigratio­n experts have questioned whether UK employers will still want to recruit from overseas or if internatio­nal students will still apply and take up places at British universiti­es as a result of the pandemic.

Out of 348,000 travellers who gave a reason for moving to the UK long-term, 50 per cent of nonEU migrants (174,000) were internatio­nal students.

The year-on-year increase in those coming for formal study from Asia (up from 118,000 in 2018 to 149,000 in 2019), and also for East Asia (62,000 to 80,000) and South Asia (27,000 to 42,000) is described as statistica­lly significan­t.

The figures are classed as experiment­al estimates after the ONS admitted last year that it had under-estimated some EU net migration data in 2016/17.

The Prime Minister’s official spokesman said the Government remained committed to bringing net migration down. Asked if Boris Johnson was embarrasse­d that the numbers appeared to be going in the wrong direction, the spokesman said legislatio­n, supporting the manifesto commitment of a points-based system, was currently making its way through Parliament.

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