Australia will welcome 174,000 fewer migrants than it expected just six months ago and the nation’s borders are likely to remain shut until the second half of next year.
The federal budget reveals the government expects a net 96,600 Australians to leave the country this financial year followed by an exodus of another 77,400 in 2021-22.
This is substantially higher than the net 93,200 who the government anticipated leaving over the same two years in the October federal budget.
This is due to the government pushing back by a year its expectations for permanent migrants and international students to begin gradually returning from mid-2022,with small pilot programs for students expected to commence later this year. In the 2020 budget the government was hopeful of reopening the border from the middle of this year.
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“The rate of international arrivals will continue to be constrained by state and territory quarantine caps over 2021 and the first half of 2022,with the exception of passengers from safe travel zones,” the budget states.
“Inbound and outbound international travel is expected to remain low through to mid-2022,after which a gradual recovery in international tourism is assumed to occur.”
Despite the government expecting 174,000 residents to leave the country over this financial year and next,the budget has maintained the assumption that 160,000 migrants will enter Australia. The government says it will prioritise processing visas for thousands of people trapped outside the country whose partners are already in Australia.