The Howard cabinet papers: Australia's 20-year tussle with immigration
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“In Australia, whether the net impact on productivity is positive will to a large extent depend on whether migrants have a higher than average skill level than the existing workforce.”
The evidence turbo-charged Australia’s shift towards a skills-based immigration system that mirrored Canada and New Zealand, with stricter qualification, financial and English-language restrictions.
In 1996, 65 per cent of migrants arrived under family reunification visas and 35 per cent were skills-based. By 2018 those statistics had been reversed.
The Howard cabinet did not want to increase the overall permanent intake beyond 96,000, so it had to find cuts elsewhere if it was going remain within the cap.
Mr Ruddock presented several proposals, including a radical option to restrict family sponsorship rights to citizens only, which would have seen the queue reduced by 40 per cent, and a regulation change that could have seen any applicants that did not fit within the cap having their application terminated along with a non-refundable fee of up to $900.
Article source: https://www.smh.com.au/world/central-america/panic-as-venezuela-hit-by-magnitude-7-3-earthquake-20180822-p4zz2e.html?ref=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_source=rss_world
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