In their latest report, Rethinking Permanent Migration After the Pandemic, Grattan Institute's researchers have suggested sweeping reforms to Australia's migration program.
Some of the suggested reforms include targeting young skilled workers with higher English language proficiency and preventing migrants from moving to regional Australia.
Highlights:
- Prioritise permanent visas for young and highly-skilled migrants with good English: Grattan research
- Report urges government to scrap Business Investment and Innovation Program, scale down global talent visa program
- Younger migrants with better English contribute more to economy, rely less on government safety net: Prof. Vinod Mishra, Monash Business School
Brendan Coates, Henry Sherrell and Will Mackey, who authored the report for Melbourne-based policy think tank, also suggested the Australian government scrap the Business Investment and Innovation Program (BIIP).
“Today, a growing share of permanent skilled visas are allocated to boosting business investment and to the unproven Global Talent program. These changes should be reversed,” the advocated.
“In particular, the BIIP should be abolished. BIIP visa holders bring fewer benefits to Australia than skilled migrants selected through other streams because they are older, speak little English, and earn lower incomes,” the report added.BIPP, unveiled in 2012, aims to target businesspeople with a range of business skills who want to establish, develop and manage a new or existing business in Australia.
Researchers asked for the abolition of the Business Investment and Innovation Program (BIIP) and suggested a review of the Global Talent visa program. Source: Getty Images/Drazen
Researchers at Grattan Institute also suggested the Australian government scale back the Global Talent Program, touted as “the fastest way to Australian permanent residency for highly-skilled professionals in 10 nominated sectors”.
The program aims to help grow Australia’s innovation and tech economies.
“The Global Talent Program, introduced as a pilot of 1,000 visas in 2018-19, has expanded rapidly to a planned 11,000 visas in 2020-21. Yet, its value remains unproven,” the report noted.Monash Business School’s Associate Professor Vinod Mishra said the report looks at Australian immigration critically, which is at an all-time low because of COVID-related travel restrictions.
Monash Business School's Associate Professor Vinod Mishra. Source: Supplied by Vinod Mishra
“I broadly agree with the findings of the report from the economic point of view. Younger migrants with better English should get priority as they contribute more to the economy and rely less on the social safety schemes of the government,” Mr Mishra told SBS Hindi.
“There has been criticism about the BIIP in the past as well. It is argued that people [who enter Australia] under the BIIP program, are usually middle-aged and speak average English. It would be better if the BIPP quota is given to youngsters.
“The report advocates prioritising the permanent skilled migration of younger workers. The argument is that skilled workers are net contributors to the public purse (through the tax system), which can subsidise a lot of public spending (Medicare, unemployment benefits, pensions etc) over a lifetime,” he elaborated.
“Thus, the younger and more skilled the migrants are (i.e. the more number of working years they are left with and the higher their wages are), the more is the gain to the public purse (or the fiscal dividend, as the report puts it),” Mr Mishra added.
Researches mentioned in the report that the number of skilled worker visas – allocated via employer sponsorship and the points test – should be expanded.
“But these visas also need a rethink,” they added.
“Permanent skilled worker visas should no longer be targeted at skills shortages. Instead, permanent skilled worker visas should be targeted at younger, higher-skilled migrants who are best placed to benefit the Australian community in the long term,” the report added.
Researchers have made six key recommendations in the report:
- Abolish the Business Investment and Innovation Program
- Scale back and independently evaluate the Global Talent visa program
- Avoid targeting permanent skilled worker visas at temporary skills shortages via occupation lists
- Make employer-sponsored visas available for workers in all occupations, provided they earn at least $80,000 a year
- Commission an independent review of points-tested visas to select younger and skilled migrants
- Improve the administration of permanent skilled worker visas and accelerate processing times
Grattan Institute’s researchers mention in the report that abolishing the BIIP could generate at least an additional $3.7 billion in personal income tax receipts over the lifetimes of each annual migrant cohort.
“Using an $80,000 wage threshold for employer-sponsored visas, rather than skills lists, could raise an additional $9.1 billion in lifetime tax revenue from each year’s cohort,” the report states.