Khaleej Times

Australia tightens student visa rules as migration hits record high

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Australia will begin enforcing tougher visa rules for foreign students this week as official data showed migration hit another record high, which is likely to further exacerbate an already tight rental market.

From Saturday, English language requiremen­ts for student and graduate visas will be increased, while the government will get the power to suspend education providers from recruiting internatio­nal students if they repeatedly break rules.

"The actions this weekend will continue to drive migration levels down while delivering on our commitment­s in the migration strategy to fix the broken system we inherited," Home Affairs Minister Clare O'neil said in a statement.

A new "genuine student test" will be introduced to further crack down on internatio­nal students who look to come to Australia primarily to work, while the imposition of "no further stay" conditions will be used on more visitor visas.

The moves follow a raft of actions last year to close off Covidera concession­s introduced by the former government, including unrestrict­ed working hours for internatio­nal students. The government at the time said rules would be tightened for students that could halve its migrant intake over two years.

Australia boosted its annual migration numbers in 2022 to help businesses recruit staff to fill shortages after the Covid-19 pandemic brought strict border controls, and kept foreign students and workers out for nearly two years.

But the sudden influx of foreign workers and students has exacerbate­d pressure on an already tight rental market.

Date released by the Australian Bureau of Statistics on Thursday showed net immigratio­n rose 60 per cent to a record 548,800 in the year to September 30, 2023, higher than the 518,000 people in the year ending June 2023.

Overall, Australia's population rose 2.5 per cent — the fastest pace on record — to 26.8 million people in the year to last September.

The record migration — driven by students from India, China and Philippine­s — has expanded labour supply and restrained wage pressures, but it exacerbate­d an already tight housing market where rental vacancies hovered at record lows and elevated constructi­on costs restricted new supply.

O'neil said the government's actions since September have led to a decline in migration levels, with recent internatio­nal student visa grants down by 35% on the previous year.

 ?? ?? The net immigratio­n rose 60 per cent to a record 548,800 in the year to September 30, 2023, according to Australian Bureau of Statistics data.
The net immigratio­n rose 60 per cent to a record 548,800 in the year to September 30, 2023, according to Australian Bureau of Statistics data.

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