The Guardian (USA)

The Observer view on immigratio­n: it’s time for Tories to admit that Britain needs foreign workers

- Observer editorial

Immigratio­n has long been a fraught area of political discourse. Legitimate discussion­s about its benefits and disadvanta­ges have always had the potential to be co-opted by ethnonatio­nalists in service of racism. For populist politician­s looking to distract from or find scapegoats for their domestic failures, immigrants and asylum seekers can be an easy target.

From Enoch Powell’s “rivers of blood” speech, to Harold Wilson’s racist policy of denying entry to Kenyan Asians with British passports, to New Labour’s targeting of asylum seekers, to the current government’s Rwanda refugee policy: Britain has been far from immune from these tendencies in recent decades. Government policy has too often been driven by unrealisti­c promises, such as Theresa May’s pledge to cut net migration to the “tens of thousands”, not by what is in the best interests of the country.

This week the latest set of migration statistics will be published. They will show net migration at record levels, driven by large numbers of people from Ukraine and Hong Kong moving to the UK as a result of humanitari­an resettleme­nt schemes, and a post-Brexit liberalisa­tion of the immigratio­n regime for non-EU internatio­nal students and skilled workers. They are likely to set in train an arbitrary debate about whether levels of immigratio­n are too high that is divorced both from economic realities and public opinion.

The vote for Britain to leave the European Union was driven in large part by public sentiment that immigratio­n flows from the rest of the EU in the 2000s were too high as a result of free movement of people within the bloc. The Leave campaign put control over immigratio­n policy at the heart of its case.

But since Brexit, the salience of immigratio­n as an issue has dropped dramatical­ly. In 2016, half of voters polled said immigratio­n was a top concern; by the end of 2022, it had fallen to just 11%.

And Brexit has not led to falls in net migration; quite the contrary. As moving to Britain has been made harder for EU citizens – 51,000 more of them left the UK than came to live here in the year to June 2022 – the immigratio­n system has been quietly but significan­tly liberalise­d for migrants from the rest of the world. The salary requiremen­t for skilled worker visas has been reduced by £4,000 a year and mid-skill jobs have become eligible for these visas as a result of a reduction in minimum qualificat­ion levels. The government has the flexibilit­y to open up visas for lower-paid work where there are shortages; it did this for care jobs in February 2022. Moreover, there have been changes to visas for students that mean they can bring dependants and can remain and work here without a specific visa for up to two years after they graduate, which has increased the attractive­ness of the UK as a study destinatio­n. The 200,000 Ukrainians and 150,000 from Hong Kong who have come to the UK via bespoke resettleme­nt schemes are also counted in migration statistics.

So high net-migration numbers are a feature, not a bug of government policy. And they are a good thing. These migrants are helping to fill debilitati­ng skills shortages in the economy and are adding to the cultural richness of the UK. The NHS and care system would be in even direr straits without them: more than half of visas went to people working in health and care.

Nor are these numbers out of step with public opinion. All the evidence suggests that the public are pragmatic in their approach to immigratio­n; they are more concerned with the government’s degree of control rather than absolute levels, and on balance support immigratio­n that benefits the economy. Comparativ­e polling across 17 countries shows that British people have the most positive attitudes towards immigratio­n; only three in 10 say there should be strict limits on the numbers, whereas almost seven in 10 think people should be able to come if there are jobs available, or that anyone who wants to should be able to move here. Well over half the public think immi

gration has had a net positive effect; only 9% a bad impact on the country. These positive attitudes reflect a long-term reality, which is that no matter how much the government succeeds in improving skills, falling birth rates and an ageing society mean that, increasing­ly, the choice will be between higher levels of immigratio­n or steeper taxes in order to maintain anything like current levels of health and care provision for older adults.

But the risk is that Conservati­ve politician­s who want to push debate away from the grim state of the economy and evade blame for declining public services will try to gee up anti-immigratio­n sentiment in the run-up to the next election. On the right of the Conservati­ve party, high levels of immigratio­n are often linked to a lack of housing, stretched public services, lower wages, and – perhaps most insidiousl­y – some sort of “threat” to community cohesion and national identity. Yet politician­s cannot blame immigrants for decades-long political failures to build more houses and improve affordabil­ity.

In aggregate, immigrants pay for the services they use through their taxes; the NHS could not run without immigrant nurses and doctors. Immigratio­n has a very small impact on wages; in fact, wages have not risen in lowpaid sectors like hospitalit­y that are now experienci­ng labour shortages as a result of Brexit and the end of free movement, and the government is actively using low-skill migration in the care sector where it is the main employer to avoid the need to put up wages.

Rishi Sunak said last week that immigratio­n levels were “too high”, a nonsensica­l statement given the levels are the product of his own sensibly liberal policies. He has at least avoided settling on an unachievab­le and artificial­ly low target like some of his predecesso­rs. However, there are others in his party who are all too willing to make a toxic and false narrative about immigratio­n part of their pitch to party members to be the next Conservati­ve leader in anticipati­on of a general election defeat. And Sunak has willingly put at the heart of his agenda drastic and punitive measures to make it harder for refugees to claim asylum.

Public attitudes on immigratio­n are overwhelmi­ngly sensible, pragmatic and compassion­ate. The issue is those Conservati­ve politician­s who, driven by what’s in their perceived self-interest, are not.

Do you have an opinion on the issues raised in this article? If you would like to submit a letter of up to 250 words to be considered for publicatio­n, email it to us at observer.letters@observer.co.uk

Politician­s cannot blame immigrants for decades-long political failures to build more houses

 ?? Photograph: WPA/Getty Images ?? Rishi Sunak at the G7 summit in Hiroshima, where he said Britain’s immigratio­n levels were too high.
Photograph: WPA/Getty Images Rishi Sunak at the G7 summit in Hiroshima, where he said Britain’s immigratio­n levels were too high.

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