A selection of recent media reports

Smarter immigration controls pledge
Immigration minister Damian Green is expected to promise "smarter" controls on entry to the UK when he releases...
Coleraine Times (06-Sep-2010)
Vicar to be sentenced over sham marriages
A Church of England vicar will be sentenced today for his role in Britain's biggest sham marriage racket.
The Independent (06-Sep-2010)
Student visa crackdown as immigration minister vows to cut number of arrivals
A massive shake-up of the immigration system will slash tens of thousands from the number of foreign students...
The Mail On Sunday (06-Sep-2010)
Foreign student numbers to be cut under new visa regime
Foreign students could be blocked from some educational institutions and courses as part of a plan to reduce...
Telegraph.co.uk (06-Sep-2010)
Earned citizenship scheme faces axe
Moves to make migrants "earn" British citizenship are set to be scrapped by the Coalition Government, the...
Telegraph.co.uk (06-Sep-2010)
Foreign student blitz
BRITAIN must slash the huge number of foreign students coming here if we are to get a proper grip on immigration,...
The Scottish Sun (06-Sep-2010)
One overseas student in five overstays in UK, Home Office report shows
A fifth of the international students who come to Britain to study remain after their visas...
Guardian.co.uk (06-Sep-2010)
What about my human rights, asks woman beaten unconscious by asylum-seeker ex-lover freed by immigration judge
A dangerous criminal who has no legal right to be in Britain has gone on the run after a judge ruled that to detain him...
The Mail On Sunday (05-Sep-2010)
Huge asylum seeker children bill for Birmingham City Council
MIDLAND councils are being forced to pay out MILLIONS of pounds caring for child asylum seekers, the Sunday Mercury can....
SundayMercury.net (05-Sep-2010)
'Socialist' Labour Rivals Call For Change
The five contenders vying to become the next Labour Party leader have all said they want to move on from the Blair-Brown...
Sky News (05-Sep-2010)
Student migration 'unsustainable'
The number of foreign students let into the UK is "unsustainable", minister Damian Green will say in his first major...
Cross Map (05-Sep-2010)
Labour Rivals Debate How To Return To Power
The five Labour leadership candidates have set out their vision for the party and the country at the Sky News debate in....
MetroRadio (05-Sep-2010)
French bid to ban veils worries allies, tourists
ELAINE GANLEY Associated Press Writer= PARIS (AP) Protests in Pakistan, al-Qaida warnings, skittish Muslim tourists:.....
Guardian.co.uk (05-Sep-2010)
PROTEST OVER FRENCH GYPSY CRACKDOWN
Thousands of people all over France have marched to protest at expulsions of gypsies and other security measures adopted...
Scottish Daily Express (05-Sep-2010)
Britains secret child slaves
When she was 12 years old, all Fayola wanted was to go to school, make some new friends and study hard to become a teach...
News of the World (04-Sep-2010)
Racism infects the whole of society
The Metropolitan Police Authority announced recently that the Met is no longer affected by institutional racism. But has...
NewStatesman (04-Sep-2010)
Gardai smash immigration scam
GARDAI have smashed a lucrative scam in which human traffickers were smuggling illegal immigrants into the State. The s...
Irish Independent (04-Sep-2010)
Warning over primary school cuts
A surge in the number of four-year-olds will require primary schools to find an extra 350,000 places over the next four....
Press Association (03-Sep-2010)
Geert Wilders denounces Australian Muslim leader's call for beheading
Geert Wilders, the maverick Dutch politician, denounced a Australian Muslim leaders call for his beheading for denig...
Telegraph.co.uk (03-Sep-2010)
Murderer dubbed 'The Beast' died from heart disease
A serial rapist dubbed "The Beast" died from heart failure while serving a life term for murdering a 12-year-old girl in...
BBC News England (03-Sep-2010)

We need a radical immigration policy
Despite debate about population growth figures, the problem of immigration in the UK is clear. The government must take action

By Sir Andrew Green
Chairman, Migration Watch UK
The Guardian, London, 21 April, 2010

A very powerful Panorama programme on Monday night has turned the focus back to the prospect of the UK's population reaching 70 million in 20 years' time, followed by substantial further growth. Whether or not this projection is credible lies at the very heart of the immigration debate.

These projections are produced by the government's own statisticians in the Office for National Statistics (ONS), now under the aegis of the newly independent UK Statistics Authority. Obviously such projections become more uncertain the further ahead one looks. The government makes hay with a 1960s projection for the following 40 years which, by 2000, was spectacularly wrong. Back then the ONS assumed that the baby boom would continue – and it didn't.

Their record has greatly improved in the half century since then. Indeed, at the 20-year range which we are now discussing they have been accurate to within 2.5%. But could they yet be wrong?

It is important to be clear that there are only three variables – deaths, births and net migration. The mass migration of recent years has made immigration by far the largest factor – accounting for just over two thirds of the population increase projected for the next 20 years. That is why we can usefully consider a broad population policy without descending into absurdities like emulating China.

It is equally important to be clear that projections are not forecasts. By their nature, they take no account of future changes in government policy and only limited account of economic developments. They are, essentially, a construct based on assumptions about birth, death and immigration but they do show what is very likely to happen unless very firm measures are taken. And the existing age-structure gives the projections some stability: all the mothers for the next two decades have already been born, bar immigration. The question therefore resolves into whether these assumptions are convincing.

The simplest is the death rate. Life expectancy has increased steadily since the 1970s but the ONS principal projection conservatively assumes a lower rate of improvement in survival after 2033, down to 1% a year.

The birth rate fluctuated hugely between 1945 and 1975 but since then has varied within a much narrower band. The most commonly used measure is the total fertility rate (TFR), which shows the average number of children per woman if fertility patterns continue as at present. The TFR in 2008 was 1.95 (just below the 2.06 replacement rate) but the ONS took a more conservative assumption of 1.84 for their latest principal projection.

The major factor – net immigration – is rather more difficult. It reached a peak of 245,000 in 2004, declining to 163,000 in 2008. The ONS has assumed that it will continue into the future at 180,000. The government argues that immigration has fallen and implies that it will continue to fall, partly as a result of their points based system. The main reason for the fall in 2008 was a sharp reduction in net migration from eastern Europe, which accounted for 95% of the drop (and, of course, had little or nothing to do with government policy). The ONS has taken this into account and expects net migration from eastern Europe to fall to zero in five or six years' time. They have also tried to iron out fluctuations by looking at net migration over three-year periods. As for economic factors, the record shows that immigration falls in each recession but then resumes its strong upward trend.

What is inescapable is that immigration would have to fall very substantially to avoid the projected growth in population. Without any immigration at all, population would increase to 65 million on the birth and death rates assumed by ONS. Net immigration would have to fall to 50,000 a year – a quarter of the level of recent years, and less than one third of the ONS assumption, to prevent the UK population reaching 70 million. How is that going to happen, without a radical change of immigration policy?

That brings us to the crux of the argument. Britain is already, with Holland, the most crowded country in Europe. Most immigrants go to London and the south-east. Schemes to oblige them to work and remain in places less attractive to immigrants are unrealistic and unenforceable. There is a strong case to be made that the quality of life and social cohesion of our society as a whole will be severely affected by continued population growth on anything like the current scale.

The view of the public is very clear. According to the latest Sunday Times, 74% think immigration into the UK is too high and the government's own survey, conducted by the Department for Communities and Local Government in February 2010, found that 77% want to see immigration reduced and 50% want it reduced "by a lot". Of the ethnic respondents, 25% also wished to see immigration reduced by a lot.

Faced with such a clear expression of public opinion, repeated in poll after poll, and with the practical consequences of mass immigration highlighted in the Panorama programme, it is surely the government's duty to take firm measures on immigration policy to ensure that the population increase now projected does not take place. Instead, they seem to be in a state of denial.

© Copyright of Sir Andrew Green

http://www.guardian.co.uk/