Western Mail

Migrant numbers ‘may be higher’ than official figures

- Hayden Smith newsdesk@walesonlin­e.co.uk

NET migration from the European Union may have been undercount­ed by tens of thousands, a new report claims.

Pressure group Migration Watch UK said its analysis suggested the index – the difference between the number of people arriving and leaving – could be running at around 220,000 a year. This is nearly 50,000 higher than the official estimated level.

The claim prompted fresh scrutiny of immigratio­n data, which has been at the focus of debate in the run-up to the referendum on Europe.

Controvers­y has centred on a discrepanc­y between estimates of longterm migration and allocation­s of National Insurance (NI) numbers, which are needed by anyone wanting to work.

In the year to September, more than 650,000 NI numbers were registered to EU citizens. Over the same period, immigratio­n figures indicate 257,000 people arrived from the bloc. NI allocation­s can include those who leave the UK after a short period or have already been in the country for a long period before applying for a number.

But the large gap between the two sets of figures has fuelled claims that immigratio­n may have been under- estimated. Figures on NI numbers which are actively being used are set to be published ahead of the poll in June after the Government came under pressure on the issue.

Migration Watch, which campaigns for tighter immigratio­n controls, said it compared net migration figures with population estimates for migrants born in the group of Eastern European countries including Poland and the Czech Republic, known as the EU8 nations.

Its report said: “Between 2010 and 2015 the population born in the EU8 and living in the UK increased by an average of 90,000 a year, but during the same period estimated net migration from the EU8 averaged only 40,000.

“This suggests that EU8 net migration has been undercount­ed by 50,000 a year in the last five years.”

In the latest official figures, overall internatio­nal net migration was estimated at 323,000 for the year ending September – more than three times the government’s aim of less than 100,000.

Estimated net EU migration to the UK was 172,000 and 191,000 for nonEU migration, while 40,000 more Britons left the country than arrived.

The report said: “Official figures for Eastern European net migration could have been underestim­ated by more than 50,000 a year in each of the last five years.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom