Letter to the Home Secretary on the rapid review of the Graduate route (accessible) (2024)

Letter to the Home Secretary on the rapid review of the Graduate route (accessible) (1)

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Migration Advisory Committee
2nd Floor Peel Building NE
2 Marsham Street
London
SW1P 4DF

mac@homeoffice.gov.uk

14 May 2024

Rt Hon James Cleverly MP
Home Secretary
2 Marsham Street
London
SW1P 4DF

Dear Home Secretary,

I am pleased to inform you that we have published the Migration Advisory Committee’s (MAC) rapid review of the Graduate route, a copy of which has been provided to your office.

Our report provides insights on the five questions posed in your commissioning letter. We have not found evidence of widespread abuse on the Graduate route, where we define abuse as deliberate non-compliance with immigration rules, and we conclude that the route is not undermining the integrity and quality of the UK higher education system. However, we have reason to believe that some agents and subagents recruiting international students are mis-selling UK higher education and exploiting students in the process. We expect the impact on public finances of Graduate visa holders on the route to be small but positive, as most appear to work, are young, and have no recourse to public funds.

Having laid out in full our answers to these five questions in our report, we provide three sets of recommendations:

  • We recommend retaining the Graduate route in its current form. We found that the Graduate route is broadly achieving the objectives set out by the Home Office, while also supporting Government education policy as outlined in the International Education Strategy. The changes to the rules on student dependants which were implemented in January and are in effect a change to the dependant rules of the Graduate route, will likely have a significant effect on Graduate route usage going forward. Whilst initial data suggests these changes are already substantially reducing international student numbers, we believe their full impact should be assessed before considering further changes. Implementing additional restrictions or closing the route now could risk overcorrection. Given international student fees help make up the financial deficit that universities have from teaching domestic students and research, any significant restrictions to the route should only be considered once the structural funding issues in the higher education sector have been addressed. This speaks to the broader point that any changes to migration policy will likely involve trade-offs across other areas of Government policy.

  • We recommend that the Government establishes a mandatory registration system for international recruitment agents and subagents which encompasses the quality controls in the voluntary Agent Quality Framework, consulting with the Devolved Administrations to ensure UK-wide coverage. We recommend that universities should be required to publish data on their spend on recruitment agents and the number of international students recruited through such means annually as a starting point to improving disclosure. Whilst most agents play an important role in promoting the UK and in supporting international students, we found some examples of bad practice from certain agents. Our recommendations should help ensure that the quality of UK higher education is upheld, and students are protected from exploitation.

  • We provide several recommendations on data and monitoring for the route and the wider immigration system which are outlined in our report. Firstly, we recommend that the Government should only open new migration routes or make significant policy changes when it has a clear plan for how it will collect and monitor data to assess the effectiveness of the route against its objectives and understand wider impacts. We also recommend that the Home Office introduces a requirement for universities to provide it with confirmation of the course outcome (e.g., class of degree) on the Student route, in addition to confirmation that a course has been successfully completed which is currently required. We note that some of the data you referred to in your commissioning letter was incorrect. This data was not referring to those that had switched from the Graduate route to the Skilled Worker route, rather it covered those that had switched from the Student route to the Skilled Worker route. This takes us to our next recommendation; we recommend the Home Office undertakes a review of the data variables used for analytical purposes across the largest visa routes (including the Skilled Worker route, Student route and Graduate route) to develop a clear definition of what these data represent, and the quality of each variable collected. Finally, we recommend that the Government explore and make further use of the HO/HMRC matched data.

We look forward to your response to our report and to receiving the Immigration Salary List commission shortly.

On behalf of the Migration Advisory Committee,

Yours sincerely,

Professor Brian Bell
Chair, Migration Advisory Committee

CC:

  • Tom Pursglove MP, Minister of State for Legal Migration and the Border
  • Matthew Rycroft, Home Office Permanent Secretary
  • Simon Ridley, Home Office Second Permanent Secretary
  • Daniel Hobbs, Director General Migration and Borders Group
Letter to the Home Secretary on the rapid review of the Graduate route (accessible) (2024)

FAQs

What is the Migration Advisory Committee? ›

The Migration Advisory Committee is a newly established non-departmental public body set up to provide transparent, independent and evidence-based advice to Government on where shortages of skilled labour exist that can sensibly be filled by migration.

What is the graduate route in the UK? ›

The Graduate route provides an opportunity for international students who have been awarded their degree to stay in the UK and work, or look for work, at any skill level for 2 years, or 3 years for doctoral students.

What is the full form of Mac in the UK? ›

The Migration Advisory Committee (MAC) is an independent, non-statutory, non-time limited, non-departmental public body that advises the government on migration issues.

What is the purpose of a migration agent? ›

A registered migration agent can help you apply for a visa by: explaining which visa options are available to you. recommending the best visa option for you. preparing documents for your visa application.

Why is the advisory committee important? ›

The primary purpose of advisory committees is to provide judicious advice, from a citizen perspective, to the Mayor and Commission which is the Unified Government's elected policy-making body.

How long can I be outside the UK on the graduate route? ›

Graduate permission has no restriction or time limit on travel outside the UK. As a reminder, most applicants will be granted two years of leave except PhD graduates who will receive three years.

What is the graduate route for Oxford? ›

The Graduate Route opened on 1 July 2021 to allow students who have successfully completed an undergraduate or postgraduate degree to apply for a visa to stay on to work, be self-employed or run a business. Under the route, permission will be granted for two years, or three years if you completed a DPhil.

What is graduate school called in England? ›

A postgraduate degree is the next level of study after an undergraduate degree. It can be a level 7 or level 8 qualification in England and Wales or level 11 or 12 in Scotland.

Is Mac Scottish or Irish? ›

The contraction from Mac to Mc has occurred more in Ireland than in Scotland, with two out of three Mc surnames originating in Ireland, but two out of three Mac surnames originating in Scotland. McCarthy is the only Mac/Mc name in the Irish top ten surnames, and MacDonald is the only one in the Scottish top ten.

What is Mac slang for? ›

mac in American English

(mæk) noun. (often cap) informal. fellow; bud (a familiar term of address to a man or boy whose name is not known to the speaker)

Is MC or Mac Catholic? ›

Mc vs Mac Catholic or Protestant

The common misconceptions that Mc is a prefix that is uniquely associated with Ireland, while Mac is a prefix that is only used in Scotland, and that families who practice Catholicism use one prefix while families who practice Protestantism use the other prefix are both incorrect.

Who funds the Migration Policy Institute? ›

MPI is funded primarily through research grants from foundations. We also receive funding from organizations, U.S. and international government agencies, corporations, and individuals.

What is the advisory committee on free movement of workers? ›

The Advisory Committee on Free Movement of Workers was set up by Regulation 1612/68 (now codified by Regulation 492/2011). It is composed of six members for each Member State: two representing the government, two the trade unions and two the employers' associations.

Who funds the International Organization for Migration? ›

The IOM is funded mainly by voluntary contributions from States for projects with a small percentage for the functioning of the organization paid by its member States.

What does the US Committee for Refugees and Immigrants do? ›

The U.S. Committee for Refugees and Immigrants (USCRI) is a non-profit, non-governmental organization that has served refugees and immigrants and defended the rights of refugees, asylum seekers, and internally displaced persons worldwide since 1911.

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