World Immigration News

Cutting migrant numbers won’t help housing – the real immigration problems not being tackled this election

Release Date
2025-04-14
Media
The Conversation
Summary
This article discusses how immigration has become a key issue in the lead-up to Australia’s 2025 federal election, with Opposition Leader Peter Dutton proposing major cuts to both permanent and net overseas migration. He argues that reducing immigration will ease pressure on housing and help young Australians afford homes. However, the article contends that this claim is misleading and oversimplified.

Cutting permanent migration, especially at this time, is seen as counterproductive. Permanent migrants contribute significantly to economic growth and help offset an aging population. Moreover, most permanent visa recipients are already in Australia and do not contribute to additional housing demand. Dutton’s plan fails to specify which visa categories would be cut, despite rising demand in family and employer-sponsored streams.

The proposal to reduce net overseas migration by 100,000 people immediately is also deemed unrealistic. Due to post-COVID visa grants, many temporary migrants will remain in Australia for several more years, making it impossible to meet this target quickly. Additionally, temporary migrants rarely buy property and only have a limited and localized impact on rental markets.

The real issue behind Australia’s housing crisis lies in a severe shortage of construction workers—around 130,000 are needed. While both major parties are promoting apprenticeships, this approach is slow, and Australia urgently needs more skilled migrants. However, systemic barriers in the migration process are preventing that from happening, and neither party is offering innovative solutions.

Other ongoing problems, such as the large number of people remaining in Australia despite visa refusals, also remain unaddressed. In sum, the article argues that blaming migration for housing affordability is a political distraction. Real reform must focus on fixing structural issues in the migration system, not short-term populist cuts.
Tags
AUSTRALIA