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More immigration routes require biometric residence permit

Posted by Richmond Canter
Richmond Canter
As specialist immigration barristers we offer immigration law solutions to busin
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on Thursday, 08 March 2012
in Right of Residence

The UK Border Agency has completed the rollout of biometric residence permits in the UK. This significantly increases the number of biometric residence permits issued by the agency.

From 29th February 2012, all applicants from outside the European Economic Area (EEA) applying to stay in the UK for more than six months have to register their fingerprints and digital facial image. Successful applicants will be issued a biometric residence permit as evidence of immigration status and entitlements in the UK. This includes refugees and those granted settlement.

Since the rollout began in November 2008 the home office has issued around 650,000 biometric residence permits, containing fingerprints and photograph on a secure chip. Biometric residence permits are an important step in fighting immigration abuse and illegal working and make it easier for employers to verify a foreign national's right to work in the UK.

Source: The Home Office

Migration and unemployment

Posted by Richmond Canter
Richmond Canter
As specialist immigration barristers we offer immigration law solutions to busin
User is currently offline
on Wednesday, 11 January 2012
in Right to Work

Recent research by the National Institute for Economic and Social Research (NIESR) into the impact of immigration on the UK labour market has revealed that increased immigration was not associated with increases in claims for Jobseekers Allowance.

Existing research on the labour market impact of immigration to the UK has generally found little or no impact on average, with at most a generally modest impact on the less skilled. This paper adds to that evidence by using a more comprehensive and reliable data source, and updates the analysis to include the recent recession.

The paper presents initial results on the impact of migration inflows on the claimant count rate using previously unused data on National Insurance number (NINo) registrations of foreign nationals, which researchers regard as superior in a number of respects to data on migrants from the Labour Force Survey (LFS).

In contrast to the LFS, which is a sample survey of the entire population at a point in time, NINo registrations to overseas nationals are complete administrative data on new migrant inflows, largely for employment purposes, giving reliable estimates at much smaller geographies than is possible with the LFS.

The research found no association between migrant inflows and claimant unemployment. In addition, researchers tested for whether the impact of migration on claimant unemployment varies according to the state of the economic cycle, and found no evidence of a greater negative impact during periods of low growth or the recent recession.