Posted on March 8, 2019

Europeans Have Stopped Immigrating to Britain. But Nobody Else Has

Helen Warrell, Ozy, March 4, 2019

Since Britain’s 2016 vote to leave the European Union, the net migration of EU citizens to the U.K. has fallen 70 percent. {snip}

Figures recently released by Britain’s Office for National Statistics show the net migration of EU nationals fell to 57,000 in the year to September 2018, the lowest level in a decade. This compares with a net inflow of 189,000 EU nationals in the year to June 2016, when the Brexit referendum was held.

The change is even more stark for those people who come from the eight central and eastern European member states that joined the EU in 2004 — countries such as Poland. The number of people from such countries who are leaving Britain now outstrips those arriving. Overall, National Insurance number allocations to EU nationals fell by a third to 419,000 between 2016 and 2018. But from outside the EU, people are still coming. In fact:

Labor economists cautioned that the figure of 261,000 arrivals from outside the EU was likely to be unreliable because of the long-standing problems with the accuracy of student migration data.

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Caroline Nokes, immigration minister, said the U.K. was “continuing to attract and retain highly skilled workers,” including more doctors and nurses. The Home Office has proposed a comprehensive overhaul of the immigration regime post-Brexit, including significant new restrictions on future EU migrants.

Under the plans, subject to a yearlong consultation with business, most EU citizens will be eligible for short-term work visas of only one to two years. Those wanting to settle in Britain will be subject to a minimum salary threshold of $39,750, although employers are lobbying for this to be lowered.

However, as May struggles to win House of Commons’ approval for a Brexit deal, employers have warned that uncertainty about the fate of EU nationals in the event of a no-deal exit has made it harder to attract and retain staff.

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“Britain is not as attractive to EU migrants as it was a couple of years ago,” says Madeleine Sumption, director of the Oxford-based Migration Observatory, a research institution. “That may be because of Brexit-related political uncertainty, the falling value of the pound making U.K. wages less attractive or simply the fact that job opportunities have improved in other EU countries.”

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