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Australian net overseas migration falls to lowest level since 2022 – but the Coalition says that’s still too high

Australia's net overseas migration added 301,000 people to the population in the previous year, marking the lowest increase since mid-2022 but remaining higher than pre-pandemic levels. The Australian Bureau of Statistics reported these figures amid growing political tensions over immigration policy. Pauline Hanson's call for a 'monocultural' society has intensified the debate. Migration numbers dropped significantly during the pandemic but rebounded sharply in late 2023 before gradually declining. The current government claims the downward trend continues under its leadership, while theCoalit

Net overseas migration added 301,000 people to Australia’s population last year, the lowest increase since mid-2022 but still above the pre-pandemic pace.

The new figures from the Australian Bureau of Statistics come amid an increasingly fraught political debate around immigration, after Pauline Hanson’s declaration that Australian society should be “monocultural” .

After collapsing below zero during the Covid lockdowns, annual migration growth sprang back to as high as 556,000 in late 2023.

Sign up for the Breaking News Australia email Since then, net overseas migration (Nom) has tracked steadily down – a fact the government has been keen to emphasise amid repeated attacks from the Coalition that Labor has failed to bring the numbers of arrivals back to “sustainable” levels.

Chart showing year-on-year net overseas migration In a statement after the release of the data, the treasurer, Jim Chalmers , said “the facts clearly show that net overseas migration is coming down under Labor”.

The May budget had forecast Nom – the difference between the number of migrants arriving and leaving – would drop to 295,000 people in this financial year; to 245,000 in the next; and 225,000 in 2027-28.

But Terry Rawnsley, a senior economist at KPMG, said “the nation looks to have settled into a new normal level of net overseas migration of around 300,000 people per year”.

That would be about 25%, or 50,000, above historical levels, with the increase explained by strong migration into Queensland and Western Australia.

“The sunshine state is bringing in 75% more people from overseas than before Covid, while on the west coast there has been a 250% increase,” Rawnsley said.

“These large increases are reflective of the two states’ strong economies. Both are having to tap overseas workers to fill the jobs their economies are creating.”

In contrast, net overseas migration into NSW and Victoria is back to pre-pandemic levels, he said.

Despite the bulge in net overseas migration over the past few years, Australia’s population in mid-2025 was still about 350,000 less than Treasury predicted in the December 2019 mid-year budget and before the global health crisis.

Chart showing Australia’s predicted and actual population But Jonathon Duniam, the shadow immigration minister, said annual net overseas migration of 301,000 was “still far too high”.

“Particularly at a time when Australians are struggling to find a home, rents remain under extreme pressure and public infrastructure and services are badly stretched.”

Read the full article at The Guardian (World)
Source document: Australian Bureau of Statistics

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The Guardian (World)IndependentCenter3 days ago
Australian net overseas migration falls to lowest level since 2022 – but the Coalition says that’s still too high

Australia's net overseas migration added 301,000 people to the population in the previous year, marking the lowest increase since mid-2022 but remaining higher than pre-pandemic levels. The Australian Bureau of Statistics reported these figures amid growing political tensions over immigration policy. Pauline Hanson's call for a 'monocultural' society has intensified the debate. Migration numbers dropped significantly during the pandemic but rebounded sharply in late 2023 before gradually declining. The current government claims the downward trend continues under its leadership, while theCoalit

Bias read (Center): The article presents statistical data without overtly favoring any political side. It includes quotes from both government officials and independent economists, providing a balanced view of the situation.

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