Cost of UK asylum system nearly doubles to £4bn a
year
New data underscores the challenge facing the
government in getting to grips with irregular migration
https://www.ft.com/content/64dedfdc-2b89-4107-acc9-41bcf80eec5e
The cost of
the UK’s asylum system has nearly doubled in the past year to almost £4bn,
according to official data that reveals huge increases associated with the
record backlog in the processing of claims.
The Home
Office figures released on Thursday showed that costs reached £3.96bn in the 12
months to the end of June 2023, up from £2.12bn in the same period a year
earlier, and more than six times the £631mn in 2018 when the asylum backlog
began to build.
The number
of asylum cases awaiting an initial decision jumped to 134,046 (relating to
175,457 people), a rise of 35 per cent on the same period the previous year.
The latest
data underscores the scale of the challenge facing UK prime minister Rishi
Sunak in delivering on his promise to tackle the asylum backlog and halt small
boats crossing the Channel.
More than
£6mn a day is being spent accommodating people in hotels as a result of the
backlog, according to the government. In an effort to move asylum seekers from
hotels, the government has recently begun investing heavily in redeveloping
disused military bases and former prisons, leasing a floating barge and
expanding detention capacity.
The number
of applications completed on average per caseworker each month during the 12
months to June was 1.9, down from three a year ago and a long way off the high
of 6.7 in 2016.
Peter
Walsh, senior researcher at the Oxford Migration Observatory think- tank,
pointed out the cost of processing each individual case was more than £20,000,
the highest for over a decade.
“While the
government allows the asylum backlog to grow, the costs will inevitably mount
for the British taxpayer. It is also important to note that this expansion is
not driven primarily by people arriving by small boat, who only accounted for a
third of the backlog in the latest Home Office data,” he added, questioning the
government’s obsessive focus on Channel crossings.
The data
showed that less than half (40,386) of the 97,390 new asylum claims in the 12
months came from people entering the UK on small boats.
The Home
Office said the majority of asylum applications were from people arriving in
the country on a temporary visa, through other irregular routes, including in
lorries or shipping containers, or after entering the country with fraudulent
documents.
The data
also raised questions about the government’s ability to remove people quickly
from the country after deeming them inadmissible for asylum — one of the
purposes behind the Illegal Migration Act passed in parliament last month. The
act bars anyone who arrives in the country without prior permission from
claiming asylum and puts a legal onus on the home secretary to detain and
deport them.
Between
January 2021, when updated inadmissibility rules came into
effect following the UK’s departure from the EU, and June 30 this year,
60,595 asylum claimants were identified for consideration on inadmissibility
grounds.
Of these,
29,258 were issued with “notices of intent”, informing them that they were
being considered for removal, but only 23 were deported.
While
removals overall rose 29 per cent to 4,193 in the year ending March 2023, the
majority (72 per cent) were foreign national offenders. About half of the total
were EU nationals.
The
opposition Labour party said that at current rates of removal, it would take
the government “until 2036” to deport all failed asylum seekers on
the list — not including those arriving since June 2022.
Separately,
figures released by the Department for Work and Pensions showed a record number
of foreign nationals entered the UK in the year to the end of June for work or
study, with the majority from non-EU states.
The figures
published showed the number of adults from overseas registering for a national
insurance number rose by a quarter during the 12-month period to 1.1mn, up from
880,000 last time, and the highest since records began in 2002.
The surge
in successful applications reflects the sharp rise in work and student visas,
which contributed to record net migration to the UK of 606,000 in 2022, despite
promises by Conservative prime ministers to bring net migration down. All
overseas nationals who want to work or study in the UK must obtain a national
insurance number.

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