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The long-term economic impact of reducing migration in the UK
Journal article   Peer reviewed

The long-term economic impact of reducing migration in the UK

Katerina Lisenkova, Marcel Merette and Miguel Sanchez-Martinez
National Institute economic review, Vol.229(1), pp.R22-R30
01/08/2014

Abstract

Business & Economics Economics Social Sciences
This paper uses an OLG-CGE model for the UK to illustrate the long-term effect of migration on the economy. We use the current Conservative Party migration target to reduce net migration "from hundreds of thousands to tens of thousands" as an illustration. Achieving this target would require reducing recent net migration numbers by a factor of about 2. We undertake a simulation exercise to compare a baseline scenario, which incorporates the principal 2010-based ONS population projections, with a lower migration scenario, which assumes that net migration is reduced by around 50 per cent. The results show that such a significant reduction in net migration has strong negative effects on the economy. By 2060 the levels of both GDP and GDP per person fall by 11.0 per cent and 2.7 per cent respectively. Moreover, this policy has a significant impact on public finances. To keep the government budget balanced, the effective labour income tax rate has to be increased by 2.2 percentage points in the lower migration scenario.

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