Reduce Net Migration and Reform the Immigration System
Labour · what the evidence says
An independent, source-checked look at Labour’s policy “Reduce Net Migration and Reform the Immigration System” — what it would actually do across the things that affect your life. Every claim below quotes the source behind it. How this works.
Prosperity & living standards — Mixed picture
moderate · moderate confidence
Reducing net migration could shrink the tax base and worsen shortages in key sectors like health and care in the near term, but if domestic training plans genuinely substitute for migrant labour over the long run, living standards and productivity could be sustained. The big uncertainty is whether workforce training plans will actually fill the gaps.
The evidence
- The policy aims to reduce net migration by reforming the points-based system and linking immigration to skills policy. — labour.org.uk (manifesto) — “Labour will reduce net migration by reforming the points-based immigration system with appropriate visa restrictions and linking immigration to skills policy”
- The policy would introduce workforce and training plans for sectors reliant on overseas workers, aiming to end reliance on immigration shortage lists. — labour.org.uk (manifesto) — “workforce and training plans introduced for sectors reliant on overseas workers, ending long-term reliance on immigration shortage lists”
- Skilled Worker migrants arriving in 2022/23 had a net positive fiscal impact of around £16,300 per person, suggesting reduced skilled migration would shrink fiscal contributions. — economicsobservatory.com (media) — “MAC analysis indicated that "Skilled Workers" arriving in 2022/23 had a net positive fiscal impact of £16,300, with households including dependants showing a positive impact of about £12,000”
- The OBR finds higher net migration generally contributes to lower deficits and national debt, as migrants are typically of working age and contribute to the tax base. — independent.co.uk (media) — “The Office for Budget Responsibility (OBR) generally finds that higher net migration contributes to lower deficits and national debt, as migrants are typically of working age and contribute to the tax base”
- The IFS has warned that a significant reduction in immigration could lead to a shortfall in tax receipts. — independent.co.uk (media) — “The Institute for Fiscal Studies (IFS) has warned that a significant reduction in immigration could lead to a shortfall in tax receipts”
- NHS staffing shortages were around 100,000 and projected to increase to 250,000 by 2030, indicating high dependence on migrant workers in healthcare. — vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com (media) — “NHS staffing shortages were around 100,000, projected to increase to 250,000 by 2030”
- Restrictive immigration policies risk worsening staffing shortages, particularly in social care where many workers earn below visa salary thresholds. — vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com (media) — “Restrictive immigration policies risk worsening these shortages, particularly in social care, where many workers earn below visa salary thresholds”
- A reduction in migrant labour could lead to skill shortages if domestic training does not effectively compensate. — resolutionfoundation.org (institutional) — “A reduction in migrant labour, particularly in sectors with high turnover, could lead to skill shortages if not effectively counteracted by increased domestic training and workforce planning”
- There is genuine uncertainty about whether increasing the domestically trained workforce will automatically reduce migration dependence. — migrationobservatory.ox.ac.uk (academic) — “There is uncertainty about whether increasing the domestically trained workforce will automatically lead to a corresponding reduction in migration”
- While overall GDP might fall with reduced migration, GDP per capita could potentially rise over time. — theguardian.com (media) — “While overall GDP might decrease with reduced migration, GDP per capita could potentially rise over time”
- The IFS suggests unskilled immigration can increase labour competition for low-skilled workers, potentially reducing wages at the lower end — so restriction could benefit those workers. — ifs.org.uk (institutional) — “The IFS suggests that unskilled immigration can increase labour competition for low-skilled workers, potentially leading to falling wages at the lower end of the income distribution”
- Past official forecasts have often underestimated actual migration figures, making it difficult to predict the precise impact of policy changes. — migrationobservatory.ox.ac.uk (academic) — “Past official forecasts have often underestimated actual migration figures, and the precise impact of policy changes can be difficult to predict”
Biggest unknown: Whether domestic workforce and training plans can realistically replace migrant labour in shortage sectors at sufficient scale and speed — the evidence suggests this substitution is far from automatic.
Our reading: This policy creates genuine near-term and long-term tensions relevant to O13. In the near term, the fiscal and sectoral risks are real and sourced: the OBR and IFS both find that skilled migrant workers make net positive fiscal contributions, so reducing their numbers shrinks the tax base, with the IFS explicitly warning of a shortfall in tax receipts. Severe staffing shortages already exist in NHS and social care — sectors heavily reliant on migrant labour — and restrictive policies risk deepening those shortages, with downstream effects on productivity and living standards. On the other hand, reduced labour market competition at the lower end could improve wages for low-skilled domestic workers (IFS), and GDP per capita could rise even if aggregate GDP falls. The policy's stated mechanism — workforce and training plans to substitute domestic labour for migrant workers — is coherent in principle, but the evidence explicitly flags that substitution is not automatic and the timeline is uncertain. The closure of the skilled worker route for social care already illustrates the real-world bite of these restrictions. Because the near-term costs (fiscal drag, care/health sector strain) are well-evidenced, while the long-term upside (domestic skills substitution, higher GDP per capita) is plausible but uncertain and dependent on delivery of training plans that have no committed budget or quantified target in the policy text, the verdict is mixed at moderate magnitude over a long-term horizon. Near-term effects are more likely to worsen living standards through service quality and fiscal tightening; long-term effects depend entirely on whether domestic training plans deliver at scale — which the evidence says is far from guaranteed.
Healthcare — Hurts
moderate · moderate confidence
Cutting migration to health and social care is likely to worsen NHS and care staffing shortages in the short-to-medium term, because overseas workers fill a large share of those roles and domestic training takes years to scale up. The policy promises workforce plans to compensate, but evidence suggests these are unlikely to close the gap quickly enough.
The evidence
- The policy will introduce workforce and training plans for sectors reliant on overseas workers to end long-term reliance on immigration shortage lists. — labour.org.uk (manifesto) — “workforce and training plans introduced for sectors reliant on overseas workers, ending long-term reliance on immigration shortage lists”
- A significant share of NHS staff are non-British: in 2019, 28.4% of doctors were non-British nationals. — vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com (media) — “In June 2019, 13.3% of NHS staff in England were non-British, rising to 28.4% among doctors”
- NHS staffing shortages were already around 100,000 and projected to rise to 250,000 by 2030. — vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com (media) — “NHS staffing shortages were around 100,000, projected to increase to 250,000 by 2030”
- Restrictive immigration policies risk worsening staffing shortages, particularly in social care where many workers earn below visa salary thresholds. — vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com (media) — “Restrictive immigration policies risk worsening these shortages, particularly in social care, where many workers earn below visa salary thresholds”
- The Skilled Worker route for social care has already been closed from July 2025, illustrating the direction of travel. — migrationobservatory.ox.ac.uk (academic) — “The closure of the Skilled Worker route for social care in July 2025 and the ineligibility of some middle-skilled occupations for work visas illustrate the move away from reliance on such lists”
- Migrants constitute a vital part of the health and care workforce; restricting their entry could worsen existing staffing crises. — vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com (media) — “They warn that restrictive immigration policies could worsen existing staffing crises in these sectors”
- It is uncertain whether increasing the domestically trained workforce will automatically reduce migration needs. — migrationobservatory.ox.ac.uk (academic) — “There is uncertainty about whether increasing the domestically trained workforce will automatically lead to a corresponding reduction in migration”
- A reduction in migrant labour, particularly in high-turnover sectors, could lead to skill shortages if domestic training does not effectively compensate. — resolutionfoundation.org (institutional) — “A reduction in migrant labour, particularly in sectors with high turnover, could lead to skill shortages if not effectively counteracted by increased domestic training and workforce planning”
Biggest unknown: Whether domestic training and workforce plans can be scaled fast enough to offset the loss of overseas health and care workers — evidence suggests this is uncertain and historically has not kept pace.
Our reading: The NHS and social care system are heavily dependent on overseas workers — over a quarter of NHS doctors are non-British, and staffing shortfalls already stand at roughly 100,000 with projections of 250,000 by 2030. The policy explicitly targets reducing net migration and has already moved to close the social care Skilled Worker route. While it promises workforce and training plans to compensate, the evidence consistently flags that domestic training pipelines take years to build and have historically not kept pace with demand. Experts warn that restricting immigration in these sectors risks deepening rather than resolving the staffing crisis. Migrants also tend to use NHS services less than UK-born residents, so reducing their numbers slightly reduces demand but this effect is dwarfed by the workforce supply impact. The direction of effect on healthcare access and waiting times is therefore negative in the near-to-medium term. The magnitude is moderate rather than major because the policy does include mitigation measures (workforce plans, MAC strengthening) and some reduction in demand-side pressure from fewer migrants using services, but the net effect on capacity is likely adverse. Confidence is moderate because the precise scale of workforce impact depends on implementation speed and how domestic training scales — genuinely uncertain parameters.
Good work & fair pay — Mixed picture
moderate · moderate confidence
This policy could protect UK workers' rights by barring exploitative employers from hiring abroad, but cutting migrant labour in shortage sectors like social care risks staffing crises if domestic training cannot fill the gap. The net effect on pay and job quality is genuinely split.
The evidence
- Employers who abuse the visa system or flout employment law will be barred from hiring workers from abroad. — labour.org.uk (manifesto) — “bar employers who abuse the visa system or flout employment law from hiring workers from abroad”
- Workforce and training plans will be introduced for sectors reliant on overseas workers to end long-term reliance on immigration shortage lists. — labour.org.uk (manifesto) — “workforce and training plans introduced for sectors reliant on overseas workers, ending long-term reliance on immigration shortage lists”
- Tied visas can trap migrant workers in poor-quality employment, making it hard to leave abusive situations. — ein.org.uk (media) — “"tied visas" can trap workers in poor-quality employment, making it difficult for them to leave abusive situations”
- NHS staffing shortages were around 100,000 and projected to increase to 250,000 by 2030. — vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com (media) — “NHS staffing shortages were around 100,000, projected to increase to 250,000 by 2030”
- Restrictive immigration policies risk worsening staffing shortages, particularly in social care where many workers earn below visa salary thresholds. — vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com (media) — “Restrictive immigration policies risk worsening these shortages, particularly in social care, where many workers earn below visa salary thresholds”
- A reduction in migrant labour in high-turnover sectors could lead to skill shortages if domestic training is not effective. — resolutionfoundation.org (institutional) — “A reduction in migrant labour, particularly in sectors with high turnover, could lead to skill shortages if not effectively counteracted by increased domestic training and workforce planning”
- The IFS suggests unskilled immigration can increase labour competition for low-skilled workers, potentially pushing wages down at the lower end. — ifs.org.uk (institutional) — “unskilled immigration can increase labour competition for low-skilled workers, potentially leading to falling wages at the lower end of the income distribution”
- There is uncertainty about whether increasing domestic workforce training will automatically reduce reliance on migrant labour. — migrationobservatory.ox.ac.uk (academic) — “There is uncertainty about whether increasing the domestically trained workforce will automatically lead to a corresponding reduction in migration”
- The closure of the Skilled Worker route for social care illustrates the move away from shortage lists, with real sectoral impacts already visible. — migrationobservatory.ox.ac.uk (academic) — “The closure of the Skilled Worker route for social care in July 2025 and the ineligibility of some middle-skilled occupations for work visas illustrate the move away from reliance on such lists”
Biggest unknown: Whether domestic workforce and training plans can realistically replace migrant labour in shortage sectors — if they cannot, the result is vacancies and service degradation rather than better pay or security for UK workers.
Our reading: This policy has two distinct channels affecting O4. First, the employer-sanctions mechanism — barring exploitative employers from hiring abroad — directly targets a key driver of poor conditions for migrant workers: the tied-visa model that traps workers in abusive roles. This is a genuine improvement for job quality and worker security at the lower end of the labour market. Second, reducing overall migration in shortage sectors creates a countervailing risk. Social care and the NHS already face severe projected staffing deficits, and restrictive immigration policies risk worsening those shortages. Workers in those sectors — both domestic and migrant — face worse conditions when understaffed. The IFS finding that unskilled immigration can suppress wages at the bottom cuts the other way: less competition could lift wages for low-skilled domestic workers, but only if vacancies are actually filled by domestic recruits. That depends entirely on whether the promised workforce and training plans succeed — and credible analysts flag genuine uncertainty here. The net verdict is therefore mixed: real upside in employment rights enforcement and potential wage floor effects for domestic low-skilled workers; real downside risk in shortage-sector staffing crises. The magnitude is moderate because both channels affect large numbers of workers, and the time horizon is long-term because domestic workforce substitution, if it happens at all, takes years to build.
Education & opportunity — Little effect
minor · low confidence
This immigration policy touches on skills and workforce training, which could in theory nudge domestic skills development, but the training plans are aspirational with no committed budget or statutory mechanism. There is no direct effect on school standards, the attainment gap, or FE funding.
The evidence
- The policy commits to linking immigration to skills policy and introducing workforce and training plans for sectors reliant on overseas workers, aiming to end reliance on immigration shortage lists. — labour.org.uk (manifesto) — “workforce and training plans introduced for sectors reliant on overseas workers, ending long-term reliance on immigration shortage lists”
- The policy aims to reform the points-based system by aligning immigration with domestic skills development. — ibanet.org (media) — “aligning immigration with domestic skills development”
- There is genuine uncertainty about whether increasing the domestically trained workforce will automatically lead to a corresponding reduction in migration or improvement in skills supply. — migrationobservatory.ox.ac.uk (academic) — “There is uncertainty about whether increasing the domestically trained workforce will automatically lead to a corresponding reduction in migration”
- A reduction in migrant labour could lead to skill shortages if domestic training plans are not effectively implemented. — resolutionfoundation.org (institutional) — “A reduction in migrant labour, particularly in sectors with high turnover, could lead to skill shortages if not effectively counteracted by increased domestic training and workforce planning”
Biggest unknown: Whether the promised 'workforce and training plans' translate into funded, delivered domestic skills provision — or remain aspirational commitments with no legislative teeth.
Our reading: The policy's connection to O7 (education and opportunity) runs primarily through its stated ambition to link immigration restriction to domestic skills development and introduce workforce training plans. These commitments point in a direction that could, in principle, stimulate domestic apprenticeships and FE participation in sectors like health, social care, and construction. However, the policy text contains only soft commitments — 'plans introduced', 'linking immigration to skills policy' — with no committed budget, statutory duty, or quantified training target cited in the evidence. Under the soft-verb rule, this is insufficient to award an 'improves' direction. The policy says nothing about school standards, the pupil attainment gap, early years provision, or higher education access — the core O7 indicators. The skills/training angle is real but marginal and contested: evidence notes genuine uncertainty about whether domestic training supply can substitute for migrant labour at scale. On balance, the policy is largely an immigration-restriction measure that gestures at a skills link without delivering a concrete educational mechanism. The effect on O7 fundamentals at population scale is minimal and speculative — meeting the threshold for 'negligible' rather than a directional verdict. The magnitude is set to minor only because a long-run domestic-training stimulus is logically plausible, but confidence is low given the absence of evidenced delivery mechanisms.
Security in later life — Hurts
moderate · moderate confidence
Restricting immigration is likely to worsen staffing in social care and the NHS — sectors that older people depend on most — because many care workers earn below visa salary thresholds. The policy promises domestic workforce plans but there is no guaranteed mechanism or timeline for those to fill the gap.
The evidence
- The policy will introduce workforce and training plans for sectors reliant on overseas workers, including health and social care, to reduce long-term dependence on immigration shortage lists. — labour.org.uk (media) — “introduce workforce and training plans for sectors reliant on overseas workers, such as health, social care, and construction, aiming to reduce long-term dependence on immigration shortage lists”
- The closure of the Skilled Worker route for social care illustrates a concrete move away from relying on overseas workers in that sector. — migrationobservatory.ox.ac.uk (academic) — “The closure of the Skilled Worker route for social care in July 2025 and the ineligibility of some middle-skilled occupations for work visas illustrate the move away from reliance on such lists”
- Restrictive immigration policies risk worsening staffing shortages in social care, where many workers earn below visa salary thresholds. — vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com (media) — “Restrictive immigration policies risk worsening these shortages, particularly in social care, where many workers earn below visa salary thresholds”
- Experts warn that restrictive immigration policies could worsen existing staffing crises in health and care sectors. — vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com (media) — “They warn that restrictive immigration policies could worsen existing staffing crises in these sectors”
- There is genuine uncertainty about whether increasing the domestically trained workforce will automatically reduce reliance on migration. — migrationobservatory.ox.ac.uk (academic) — “There is uncertainty about whether increasing the domestically trained workforce will automatically lead to a corresponding reduction in migration”
- A reduction in migrant labour in high-turnover sectors could lead to skill shortages if domestic training is not effective. — resolutionfoundation.org (institutional) — “A reduction in migrant labour, particularly in sectors with high turnover, could lead to skill shortages if not effectively counteracted by increased domestic training and workforce planning”
- The IFS has warned that significant reduction in immigration could lead to a shortfall in tax receipts, which would affect public spending capacity including pensions and social care. — independent.co.uk (media) — “The Institute for Fiscal Studies (IFS) has warned that a significant reduction in immigration could lead to a shortfall in tax receipts”
Biggest unknown: Whether domestic training and workforce plans can be scaled quickly enough to replace migrant workers in social care before shortages deepen.
Our reading: O8 — security in later life — hinges on social care access and the NHS. Both sectors are heavily dependent on migrant workers. The evidence shows that the Skilled Worker route for social care has already been closed, and experts directly warn that this risks worsening staffing crises in care and health. Many social care workers earn below visa salary thresholds, making them ineligible under tighter immigration rules, leaving a structural gap. The policy does promise workforce and training plans, but research explicitly notes uncertainty about whether domestic training can substitute for migrant labour at scale — this is an aspiration without a committed deliverable or timeline sufficient to close the gap in the near term. Additionally, the IFS warns that reduced migration shrinks the tax base, which puts fiscal pressure on the public spending that funds the state pension and social care. The combination of near-term workforce pressure in care and NHS — sectors older people depend on most — and medium-term fiscal drag points to a worsening of the O8 indicators during this parliament. The magnitude is moderate rather than major because the domestic training commitment, if delivered, could partially offset the harm over time, and because some degree of migration restriction was already underway regardless of this policy.
Immigration & border control — Moves toward more control
We don’t call this better or worse — that’s your call; we only show which way the policy moves it.
moderate · moderate confidence
This policy moves immigration in a more controlled direction by tightening visa rules, penalising employers who misuse the system, and aiming to reduce reliance on overseas workers in key sectors. Whether it will actually lower net migration by as much as intended depends on how quickly domestic training can fill the gaps.
The evidence
- The policy explicitly states an intent to reduce net migration via visa restrictions and skills-linked immigration reform. — labour.org.uk (manifesto) — “Labour will reduce net migration by reforming the points-based immigration system with appropriate visa restrictions and linking immigration to skills policy”
- Employers who abuse the visa system or flout employment law would be barred from hiring workers from abroad. — labour.org.uk (manifesto) — “They will bar employers who abuse the visa system or flout employment law from hiring workers from abroad”
- The policy aims to end long-term reliance on immigration shortage lists through workforce and training plans. — labour.org.uk (manifesto) — “ending long-term reliance on immigration shortage lists”
- The closure of the Skilled Worker route for social care in July 2025 illustrates a concrete move away from shortage-list reliance. — migrationobservatory.ox.ac.uk (academic) — “The closure of the Skilled Worker route for social care in July 2025 and the ineligibility of some middle-skilled occupations for work visas illustrate the move away from reliance on such lists”
- Domestic training plans may not automatically reduce migration levels if shortages persist. — migrationobservatory.ox.ac.uk (academic) — “There is uncertainty about whether increasing the domestically trained workforce will automatically lead to a corresponding reduction in migration”
- Past forecasts have often underestimated migration, making precise impact predictions difficult. — migrationobservatory.ox.ac.uk (academic) — “Past official forecasts have often underestimated actual migration figures, and the precise impact of policy changes can be difficult to predict”
Biggest unknown: Whether domestic workforce and training plans will substitute sufficiently for migrant labour, given significant existing shortages in sectors like health and social care.
Our reading: The policy combines stated intent to lower net migration with concrete mechanisms: tighter visa restrictions, employer sanctions, a strengthened MAC, and sector-based workforce plans designed to reduce dependence on overseas labour. These measures all point in a more controlled direction. The closure of the social care Skilled Worker route is a measurable step already in train. The main uncertainty is whether domestic training pipelines can genuinely substitute for migrant labour in shortage sectors, which affects how much net migration actually falls relative to the policy's ambition.