Net immigration into Britain is set to stick at around 300,000 a year - the same as before Brexit - until the end of the decade but experts say numbers WILL fall from the current record high

Net migration into the UK is unlikely to drop below pre-Brexit levels by the end of the decade, experts have warned.

Arrivals will outnumber those who leave the country by 250,000 to 350,000 a year in 2030, according to the Migration Observatory at the University of Oxford and the London School of Economics (LSE).

However, in a glimmer of good news for Rishi Sunak, it predicted that the current record high migrant numbers will fall back sharply in the next couple of years. 

The war in Ukraine and people arriving to the UK from Hong Kong under resettlement schemes are said to have contributed to the latest Office for National Statistics (ONS) estimate, which put net migration at 606,000 people last year.

Arrivals will outnumber those who leave the country by 250,000 to 350,000 a year in 2030, according to the Migration Observatory at the University of Oxford and the London School of Economics (LSE).

Arrivals will outnumber those who leave the country by 250,000 to 350,000 a year in 2030, according to the Migration Observatory at the University of Oxford and the London School of Economics (LSE).

The war in Ukraine and people arriving to the UK from Hong Kong under resettlement schemes are said to have contributed to the latest Office for National Statistics (ONS) estimate, which put net migration at 606,000 people last year.

The war in Ukraine and people arriving to the UK from Hong Kong under resettlement schemes are said to have contributed to the latest Office for National Statistics (ONS) estimate, which put net migration at 606,000 people last year.

But the figures prompted unease among some Cabinet ministers and Tory MPs, with Prime Minister Rishi Sunak calling the figure 'too high' earlier this year.

The latest forecast, based on certain assumptions about migration trends as well as ONS and Home Office data, suggests that current high levels of immigration over the last two years may lead to higher emigration between 2023 and 2025.

That would largely be driven by international students, while smaller numbers of people coming from Ukraine and Hong Kong is also likely to have an impact.

Professor of economics at LSE Alan Manning, who co-authored the new report, said: 'Nobody can predict exactly what will happen to net migration, but we can set out some realistic scenarios. And most plausible scenarios involve net migration falling in the coming years.

'But many different factors affect the outlook, including what share of international students switch to long-term work visas, whether work visa numbers continue to increase as sharply as they have done in the past few years, and what happens to asylum applications.

'The unpredictability means it's very hard for policymakers to guarantee that they will deliver a specific level of net migration.'

The study finds that, largely due to a significant increase in work visas, predictions of lower net migration levels following Brexit are unlikely to happen.

Madeleine Sumption, director of the Migration Observatory, said that health and care visas were helping to keep the figures high.

'One of the striking findings is that if current trends continue, work visas look set to be the largest factor shaping overall net migration by some distance. Work-related migration has mostly been driven by health and care.

'So future migration patterns will be particularly sensitive to developments in that sector,' she said.

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