Changes made to the UK immigration system, including ending recruitment on the health and care worker visa, could cost the economy up to £10.8 billion, a report has found.
The changes, announced in a white paper in May, tightened existing immigration rules, which included ending the overseas recruitment of social care workers, reducing the standard length of the graduate visa from two years to 18 months, and requiring a higher standard of English for some immigrants to qualify for their visas.
Some of these changes, including a reduction to the list of jobs eligible for “skilled worker” visa sponsorship, were implemented in July.
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The changes to the immigration system are expected to lower net migration numbers by between 21,000 and 34,000 in 2025 to 26, and between 40,000 and 67,000 in 2029 to 2030.
The Work Rights Centre, analysing the government’s Impact Assessment, found that the reduction in income tax and fees paid by migrant workers due to the new immigration rules is “predicted to have a negative monetary impact of between -£10.8bn and -£2.2bn” over a five-year period.