Liz Truss to relax immigration rules to ease Brexit workforce shortage

The prime minister is expected to review the shortage occupation list designed to help migrants get work visas to fill vacancies in the UK

Sophie Wingate
Sunday 25 September 2022 10:55 EDT
Kwasi Kwarteng refuses to confirm changes to Brexit immigration rules

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Immigration rules are set to be relaxed as part of Liz Truss’s mission to ease labour shortages and boost business growth.

The prime minister is expected to expand the government’s shortage occupation list in order to help businesses fill vacancies by more easily recruiting overseas workers.

Ms Truss has faced industry demands for more migrant workers to be given visas to come to the UK, with labour shortages one of the main concerns voiced by employers across a range of sectors.

Businesses have been frustrated that the visa system for skilled workers has not been responsive enough to shortages they have experienced.

Downing Street did not deny that the prime minister was planning to liberalise routes to allow foreign workers to move to the UK, as first reported in The Sun.

During her campaign for the Tory leadership, Ms Truss promised to tackle the labour shortages in farming – partly caused by post-Brexit freedom of movement restrictions and accentuated by the pandemic – with a short-term expansion of the seasonal workers’ scheme.

A recent government report warned that such shortages were badly affecting the food and farming sector, often forcing farmers to cull healthy pigs and leave fruit rotting in the fields.

The seasonal workers’ programme, first launched in 2019, temporarily allows 40,000 overseas workers into the UK for seasonal roles in the horticulture and poultry sectors.

The cap is expected to be lifted and the six-month time limit extended, according to The Sun.

We need to put measures in place so that we have the right skills that the economy, including the rural economy, needs to stimulate growth

Downing Street source

A No 10 source said: “We need to put measures in place so that we have the right skills that the economy, including the rural economy, needs to stimulate growth.

“That will involve increasing numbers in some areas and decreasing them in others. As the prime minister has made clear, we also want to see people who are economically inactive get back into work.”

The government is expected to set out its plan for migration reform later this year.

It appears to be a pivot away from Boris Johnson’s stance on immigration and might anger some Brexit voters.

Ms Truss has insisted she is “unapologetic” in “focusing relentlessly on economic growth”, even if that means implementing unpopular policies.

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