China Daily

Australian PM plans to cut immigratio­n

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CANBERRA — Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison plans to permanentl­y cut the nation’s annual migration intake cap by 30,000 people.

In a keynote speech delivered on Monday night, Morrison said that he “expects” the maximum annual migration intake to be reduced from 190,000 as his government works to better manage population growth in “clogged” capital cities.

The annual cap has been set at 190,000 since 2011 but under the current Liberal National Party government Australia welcomed only 163,000 permanent arrivals in 2017-18, the lowest level in a decade.

“We’re running 30,000 below where it has been ... It wouldn’t surprise me if any process that we went through would arrive in that sort of territory,” Morrison said on Monday night.

“I believe that this is likely to end up in revising down the permanent migration cap in Australia. That would be my expectatio­n.”

The Australian Bureau of Statistics in June revealed that Australia’s population has grown by 3.75 million, or 17.9 percent, in the 10 years between 2008 and 2018.

Net overseas migration was the biggest driver of population growth in that period and the vast majority of new arrivals settled in either Melbourne or Sydney, the nation’s two biggest cities.

Morrison’s government is considerin­g a plan that would force new arrivals to live outside those two cities for at least five years to boost growth in other regions.

The PM on Monday night said Melbourne and Sydney were victims of their own success as cities and called for a “new discussion with state and territorie­s and local government­s about how we manage and plan for our changing population”.

“In Sydney, migrants accounted for around 70 percent of population growth last year. This has created its own pressure points and pressure points in population always manifest themselves in housing and infrastruc­ture,” he said.

“I’m very concerned about the rate of population growth, not the existence of population growth, but the pace of population growth. The roads are clogged, the buses and the trains are full, the schools are taking no more enrolments. We can hear that.”

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