Key Points
- Federal budget reveals visa changes.
- Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has defended changes made to Australia's migration program.
- Mr Albanese addressed Australia's visa backlog in an interview with SBS News.
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has defended changes made to Australia's migration program in his government's first budget.
In an interview with SBS News on Wednesday, Mr Albanese said the government had poured significant funds into the program.
The October budget provides an additional $576 million over four years to the Department of Home Affairs for activities including visa processing, offshore processing costs, and supporting refugees.
"This is a substantial improvement in funding for Home Affairs, we are getting the processing of visas going again," Mr Albanese said.
The $576 million sum includes an extra $194 million to go towards a shortfall in funding for the maintenance of offshore processing centres, including nearly $150 million to spent in the 2022-23 financial year. The government plans to spend a total of $632 million on offshore processing in 2022-23.
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese (right) and Treasurer Jim Chalmers. Source: AAP / LUKAS COCH/AAPIMAGE
Addressing Australia's , Mr Albanese told SBS News there were almost a million people in the queue for visas when Labor took office and that had exacerbated skill shortages in Australia.
"It's also having an impact on families for family reunion, it's having an impact on people who want to visit Australia and on our economy," he said.
"It's a substantial increase in investment that we're doing, consistent with what we said before the election."
What was in Labor's federal budget?
The previous Morrison government cut migration program funding to the Department of Home Affairs by $875 million over four years, while keeping the number of places for skilled and family visas to 160,000. Visa processing times have since blown out and Australian businesses have complained of being unable to hire enough people with the right skills.
The Albanese government previously announced it would increase the permanent migration program to 195,000 in 2022-23. This includes visas available for skilled migrants and family members.
No change to this number was included in the budget but the government did introduce a new Pacific Engagement Visa for nationals of Pacific Island countries and Timor-Leste. Up to 3,000 places will be available each year from next year, in addition to 195,000 available as part of the permanent program.
The budget also revealed the number of skilled visas available as part of the program would increase significantly from 79,600 to 142,400. This will include employer sponsored, skilled independent, regional, as well as state and territory nominated visas.
A breakdown of the skilled visas available in the 2022/23 budget.
The will stay the same with 13,750 places available in 2022/23, and an extra 16,500 for Afghan refugees over four years.
At the , the Albanese government promised to accelerate visa processing times and announced an extra $36.1 million to hire up to 500 people for nine months to help address wait times.
Immigration Minister Andrew Giles told the summit there were almost one million visas waiting to be processed when Labor won government in May. The median processing time for a temporary skilled visa had since come down from 53 days in May, to 42 days in July.
Home Affairs Minister Clare O’Neil and Immigration Minister Andrew Giles at the Jobs and Skills Summit. Source: AAP / Mick Tsikas
“Australia is ... experiencing a rapid rebound in visa applications," Mr Giles said. "We have received nearly 2.22 million new applications since 1 June 2022, compared with nearly 495,000 for the same period in 2021."
Mr Giles said the Department of Home Affairs had already added 260 more staff to support visa processing, and more were being recruited and trained in the coming weeks and months.
How does the federal budget impact visas?
Ahead of the budget, former Department of Immigration secretary Abul Rizvi said the government would need to provide a lot more than the previously promised $36.1 million for Home Affairs to get on top of its workload and bring down processing times.
But he said whether the new government would reverse the $875 million cut in full would depend on the reasons why it was done in the first place.
The Department of Home Affairs' budget was cut by the previous Morrison government. Source: AAP / JAMES ROSS
Mr Rizvi said money was only part of the problem, with other issues also developing over the past decade. This includes the design of visas, which he said had been changed to make them more bureaucratic.
"You've also got the problem that the culture of the department has been fundamentally changed and that's affecting the way visas are processed," Mr Rizvi said.
"Decision makers end up refusing applications for sometimes very petty reasons."
While the Albanese government didn't restore the entire amount of funding, it has announced a comprehensive review of the migration system to guide future reforms, with a focus on productivity, sponsorship opportunities and an internationally competitive visa process. A report is expected by the end of February 2023.
The government has also flagged plans to increase the Temporary Skilled Migration Income Threshold. The threshold was frozen at $53,900 per year but the government says that is too low and more than 80 per cent of all full-time jobs now had a salary above that.
Will more visas become available?
Labor promised at the election to abolish temporary protection visas and to transfer those who had been found to be legitimate refugees to permanent visas.
Mr Rizvi said he expected this would require them to be counted as part of the humanitarian program, which may require an increase in visas for the program.
The current humanitarian program allows for 13,750 places in 2022-23. An extra 16,500 places over four years have been provided for .
Source: SBS News
The Asylum Seeker Resource Centre said it was "deeply disappointed" key Labor commitments had not been met in the budget, including increasing Australia's humanitarian intake, abolishing Temporary Protection Visas/Safe Haven Enterprise Visas and providing appropriate social services for people seeking asylum.
"The 2022-23 Federal Budget failed to live up to the public expectations for a more compassionate and fair country for refugees and people seeking asylum," the ASRC said in a statement.