Economy

Migration hits new high – how to fix it


Last year about 1.2 million people moved to the UK, almost certainly the highest number in history. “Net migration” (the term widely used to mean net inward migration, that is immigration minus emigration) was 764,000 in 2022 and 685,000 in 2023 – about triple the level at the last general election in 2019. That’s a far cry from the “tens of thousands” promised by the Conservatives at both the 2015 and 2017 election. Overall, since 2010, when the Conservatives came to power (initially in coalition with the Lib Dems), 10 million people have moved to the UK, and 6.3 million have left, meaning net migration of 3.7 million. As the authors of a recent Centre for Policy Studies paper arguing for far greater controls on immigration (they include two Tory MPs, Robert Jenrick and Neil O’Brien) point out, that influx is the equivalent of the populations of Edinburgh, Leeds, Sheffield, Nottingham, Stoke, Bristol and Cardiff put together, or more than the entire population of Wales.

Migration hits record levels

In February, the Office for National Statistics (ONS) published its latest projections for the UK’s population. The ONS thinks the number of people living here will hit 70 million by 2026 – a decade earlier than previously envisaged – and then grow to 73.7 million over the following decade. Net inward migration is expected to account for more than 90% of the 6.6 million increase in population between 2021 and 2036. If that rise does happen, it will mark a speeding up, rather than a slowing, of the UK’s population growth due to migration. To put it in context, in the 25 years up to 1997 (when Labour came to power under Blair), cumulative net migration was 68,000. In the following 25 years to 2022, it was 5.9 million – almost 100 times as high.

Britain’s slow growth





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