A selection of recent media reports

How Britain's migrants sewed the fabric of the nation
History shows it's hard to pick out which migrants will be good for the UK. It is risky for the state to try
Guardian.co.uk (05-Feb-2012)
French interior minister claims some civilisations 'superior'
France's conservative interior minister in charge of immigration policy has spark
Telegraph.co.uk (05-Feb-2012)
BOMB PLOTTERS ARE MY STUDENTS, ADMITS CHOUDARY
HARDLINE Islamist preacher Anjem Choudary taught six of the nine fanatics jailed last week for plotting to bomb Londo
Daily Star (05-Feb-2012)
Man accused of involvment in war crimes wins human rights claim
A man accused of being complicit in war crimes in the former Yugoslavia has been allowed to stay in Brit
Telegraph.co.uk (05-Feb-2012)
Twisted concept of honour shames any civilised society
Forget cultural sensitivities, there are no excuses for domestic terrorism, writes Ruth Dudley Edwards You probably saw...
Independent.ie (05-Feb-2012)
TIME FOR SOFT-TOUCH BRITAIN TO GET TOUGH ON IMMIGRATION
BRITAIN has a proud and honourable history when it comes to immigration.
Scottish Daily Express (05-Feb-2012)
Ten jailed over sham marriage plot
Ten people have been jailed for attempting to organise an international sham marriage conspiracy spanning three churches...
Hucknall Dispatch (05-Feb-2012)
WHY UK CANNOT DEPORT THOUSANDS OF CRIMINALS
THOUSANDS of European criminals in British jails will not be sent home despite the introduction of a new prisone
Express.co.uk (05-Feb-2012)
AT LAST, ACTION TO PUT BRITONS FIRST ON HOUSING LIST
NEW rules have been introduced to stop immigrants jumping the queue ahead of British families on the housing wa
Express.co.uk (05-Feb-2012)
Romania's population falls by 12% as three million flock to richer European countries including Britain
Population has fallen to 19million as workers leave
The Daily Mail (04-Feb-2012)
Baby boom takes schools to breaking point
A council in east London is drawing up plans to convert an empty Woolworths store into a classroom and teach children in...
The Guardian (04-Feb-2012)
Illegal immigrant hid during raid on Mablethorpe takeaway
FOUR illegal immigrants have been caught following a UK Border Agency (UKBA) crackdown on busine
This is Lincolnshire (04-Feb-2012)
Theresa May Immigration Decision Triggers 'Secret Justice' Fight
The Home Secretary's refusal to tell scores of immigrants and refugees why they have been
The Huffington Post (04-Feb-2012)
Derelict working men's pub could soon reopen its doors \u2013 as a home for destitute asylum seekers
This article, by Joshua Carroll, won him this year's Wyn Harness Prize f
The Independent (04-Feb-2012)
Man raped two girls in Glasgow flats
A man from Afghanistan has been found guilty of raping two young girls at flats in Glasgow.
BBC News UK (03-Feb-2012)
Ten jailed over sham marriage plot
Published on Thursday 2 February 2012 18:01 Ten people have been jailed for attempting to organise an international sha...
Ilkeston Advertiser (03-Feb-2012)
IMMIGRATION CLAMPDOWN
IMMIGRANTS will only be allowed into Britain if they can \u201Cmake the country better\u201D.
Daily Star (03-Feb-2012)
Immigration: dubious means to an uncertain end
The truth is that politicians worry about immigration more than the rest of the population do, not less
Guardian.co.uk (02-Feb-2012)
Immigration is not just a numbers game \u2013 it's about culture, too
The debate about what constitutes Britishness has barely begun.
Telegraph.co.uk (02-Feb-2012)
A traitor's tale
Leaving the Labour party is uniquely traumatic, as Luke Bozier has just discovered \u2013 and I know all too well
The Spectator (02-Feb-2012)

Economic 1.25

Will an immigration cap raise taxes and cut growth?

Summary

1 No. Because the availability of labour is not a significant restraint on growth and will not be so for some time.

Introduction

2 An article in the Financial Times on 18 June[1] claimed that "David Cameron's proposed cap on immigration will stunt economic growth and cost families around £300 a year in higher taxes or lower public spending, according to the governments own forecasting models". This note examines their claim.

Detail

3 The article implied that the pre-budget report from the Office for Budget Responsibility (OBR)[2] had made some new projection of immigration. In fact it had not. It simply adopted the Office for National Statistics (ONS) 2008 based low migration variant. Over the five year period that the OBR were considering this is not unreasonable since immigration normally falls during a recession only to resume its upward trend when growth returns[3].

4 The workings behind the claim were explained in a blog[4]. The authors calculated that a reduction in immigration to the 1990s average of 60,000, as the government seek to achieve, would reduce the post 16 population by 0.2% per year and that this would have a similar effect on growth.

5 This analysis is faulty for two main reasons:

a) Only a minority of immigrants come to Britain with a definite job or looking for work. In 2008 only 37% of gross arrivals came here for the purposes of work[5].
b) The calculation assumed that over a five year period the growth of output will be entirely constrained by the growth of population over 16. Thus, if immigration adds an extra 1% to the population over 16 it will automatically increase national output by 1%. This is a very peculiar assumption to make during an economic recession when there is a large surplus of domestic labour available for work. The constraint on output growth is currently not a shortage of labour but a shortage of demand and too little investment. This is likely to be the case for some time to come.

6 As for the implications for government revenues, the blog did not spell out the methodology used. However, in an update to the blog, the authors admitted that theirs was "a simple calculation" using the governments own economic forecasting model. They added that "the story is certainly not a cost/benefit analysis of immigration". That is clearly an understatement. The extra population will need schools, hospitals and housing and, as they grow older, will claim pensions and the like.

7 In any case, the issue should be seen more widely. The government is hoping

to move large numbers of people off benefits and into work. This will be much easier to achieve if employers are denied and easy supply of relatively

cheap migrant labour.

Conclusion

8 On closer inspection, the story simply does not stand up.

19 July, 2010