MigrationWatch’s e-petition calling for a 70 million person cap on population sets a dangerous precedent, is damaging for our economy and unrealisable.
Ruth Grove-White is a policy officer at the Migrants’ Rights Network
The new e-petition masterminded by MigrationWatch and reported on across today’s newspapers may be in-step with a proportion of public opinion, but will provoke heated debate.
The petition argues that ‘mass immigration’ has been permitted, contributing to the Office of National Statistics’s predictions that the UK population will hit 70 million within 20 years.
It calls for the government to:
“Take all necessary steps to get immigration down to a level that will stabilize our population as close to the present level as possible and, certainly, well below 70 million.”
The intention is that 100,000 signatures will be gathered, potentially provoking a debate in parliament on the issue in the near future.
Here are three reasons why we disagree with the assertions made in the MigrationWatch petition:
1) The UK should avoid introducing a population policy by stealth
Historic and contemporary attempts to control population size in countries across the world, from mandatory birth control to experimental eugenics, have been highly controversial.
One lesson that most politicians have learned is that attempting to control population levels is often asking for trouble. The UK currently does not have a policy on what a desirable, or undesirable, population level should be – and rightly so, because history has taught us that this can be dangerous ground indeed.
So calls for a UK population ceiling of 70 million are extremely problematic. Basic economics tells us that there is simply no inherent reason why having a population of 70 million would be any better, or worse, for the UK than the current population of 62 million.
The test of a population size is in how resources are distributed across the population – and with a growing gap between rich and poor in the UK there are quite some issues to address already here. Calls to slash immigration should not be a way of side-stepping bigger questions about the well-being of our society, whatever size the population is.
2) Immigration cannot be switched on and off at the push of a button
Although it has not advocated a population limit of 70 million, the coalition government has had the explicit aim of reducing net migration to the UK since May 2010. One year and a half on, despite a host of restrictive measures including the cap on economic migration, net immigration levels have risen by 21% in 2009 to hit 239,000 in 2010.
The MigrationWatch e-petition calls for ‘all necessary steps’ to reduce immigration levels, towards a drop in population growth – but what would this actually mean in practice? In fact, there aren’t many tools left in the policy box that are not already being employed towards the goal of cutting net migration levels.
The latest batch of ONS immigration statistics showed that net immigration levels in 2010 were largely a story of declining emigration, rather than a surge in immigration. The UK also saw an increase in net migration from Eastern Europe – again largely due to a drop in European nationals leaving the UK. Due to freedom of movement, migration within the EU cannot be curbed without effectively rewriting the UK’s relationship with the European Union.
The message is that immigration levels are subject to huge fluctuation, and policy-makers are simply limited in what they can do to control them.
3) Immigration will continue to be a necessary part of the UK’s future
The MigrationWatch petition paints a bleak picture of recent immigration, as compromising “our quality of life” and putting pressure “on our public services”. But immigration to the UK over past decades has played a significant role in stimulating economic growth, generating tax revenue and powering the development of our public services.
Evidence indicates that the fiscal impact of immigration has been positive, with East European immigration in particular making a positive contribution to the public purse despite an overall budget deficit in the UK.
More than this, looking into the future there is no way around it: immigration will continue to be critical. Universities, businesses and public service providers have been vocally protesting against ongoing cuts to immigration levels, which they argue will have devastating economic impacts on them and, more widely, to economic recovery in the UK.
With immigration worth billions to the UK, policies which enable migrant workers, students, families, and others to come here must continue to play a key role into the future.
Ultimately, there is every reason why immigration policies should be carefully reviewed in terms of their impact on communities and migrants themselves in the UK. But the messages coming from MigrationWatch seem more likely to whip up fears about immigration and population levels than to really move towards an immigration policy fit for the future.
See also:
• How to create a Telegraph migration scare story – Matt Cavanagh, September 9th 2011
• Express and Mail fail the migration stats test – Sunder Katwala, August 26th 2011
• New Migration Watch report misses opportunity for balanced debate on migration – Ruth Grove-White, February 22nd 2011
• More misleading Mail migration claims – Sarah Mulley, October 29th 2010
• More misleading claims about migration – Sarah Mulley, June 3rd 2010
35 Responses to “Migrationwatch’s 70 million cap proposal is dangerous and unfeasible”
Samir Jeraj
"Migrationwatch’s 70 million cap proposal is dangerous and unfeasible": MRN (@migrants_rights) writes on @leftfootfwd http://t.co/sFQ7FwOm
Leon Wolfson
@5 – At repeatedly lying about it? Sure.
Otherwise, who gets the mandatory sterilisations? Anyone who doesn’t have a job for longer than two weeks, perhaps?
And we have an “evidence-based, skills-based points system”, which has cost the UK – in my sector – over 300 jobs and 2.5 billion in investment which I can *document* since the Tories came to power.
That’s what you’re defending.
Jennifer Green
We are a very tiny island and the most overpopulated in Eureope and probably the world. Every country including those in the EU/Greater Europe practices fairly strict immigration controls: Switzerland are having a referendum because their immigration figures reached all time high of over 200,000 last year and their Government knows they need to take urgent action: Norway closed its borders totally when war with Libya commenced and who can blame them – as a non EU country they had the control and flexibility to do what suited them?
France and Spain made their own rules and took only 20,000 Poles when they entered the EU and did not follow EU directives, but did what was best for their county – we have over 1m Poles and a fastest rising birth rate, because no one in Government or the Civil Service considered what might be the outcome of such an open door policy.
Why is immigration control such a dirty word to our politicians in this country when it is about large numbers migrating into this country and our financial and social capacity to cope.
What about the people we have a duty to here, our indigenous population, our old peole, the sick and vulnerable all who have contributed and paid their taxes and deserve proper care and support.
We are already overcrowded, can someone see sense.
Tony Dean
I really do wonder if people who write such articles are aware Britain went beyond it’s long term sustainable carrying capacity of around 22 million back around 1840.
Suggested study:-
http://populationmatters.org/documents/HowManyPeople.Summary.pdf
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ffDBi-jmmNk
FT slam dog-whistle May’s “preference for popular pandering over rational policy” | Left Foot Forward
[…] Migrationwatch’s 70 million cap proposal is dangerous and unfeasible – Ruth Grove-White, November 1st […]