Asylbewerbern sollen 10.000 £ in Rechnung gestellt werden, um den eigenen Unterhalt zu decken, sobald sie anfangen, Geld zu verdienen

    https://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/home-news/asylum-seekers-pay-housing-support-migrant-hotel-b3004947.html

    Von No-Risk-2584

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    15 Kommentare

    1. pppppppppppppppppd on

      >Home Office plans slammed as ‘performative cruelty’

      How dare anyone be asked to contribute a pittance back into a system that supported them with far more than £10k. Perish the thought.

      >The money will only be extracted from those who have “sufficient” funds, the Home Office has said

      Just gets more and more evil.

      >Imran Hussain, director of external affairs at Refugee Council, said the plan “amounts to an extra tax on refugees”.

      Well… yes?

    2. GetRektByMeh on

      I’m fine with this? We also need to talk about not naturalising refugees that don’t cover this fee too. That and some sort of integration testing as well. Extend it to children as well.

    3. UuusernameWith4Us on


      According to analysis by the think tank IPPR, the average annual cost of housing and supporting an asylum seeker was approximately £41,000 in 2023/24.

      So charge them that, with interest. If it’s fair for students it’s fair for asylum seekers.

    4. Upstairs-Passenger28 on

      The simplest way to collect this would be to create a tax bracket for immigrant workers and before you say it’s unfair lot’s of countries do this i payed 29 % tax with a working visa in Australia in the 90s let’s put some feeling of fairness back into a broken system. So British people feel it’s working to benefit all members of society

    5. bars_and_plates on

      Okay – so what happens if they just don’t work?

      Do we deport them or do we just fund indefinitely anyway?

    6. quantum_splicer on

      You know what, I am not opposed to immigration or people claiming asylum (as long as it’s legitimate).

      I think having people cover the cost of their own support, can help offset the costs incurred and also help shape public perspective on asylum seeksings, in a way which is less reactionary and more geared towards problem solving.

      I am all for this as long as:

      (1) we are reasonable in setting the income threshold for repaying,

      (2) that the pay rate scales with the person’s income and won’t cause unreasonable hardship, but at the same time will not render the collection of the money frustrated (if something is collected at such a slow rate, it becomes essentially meaningless).

      (3) People are given sufficent time to pay it off

    7. Why only £10,000 when the average cost is reportedly much higher?

      If we’re expecting UK students to repay / cover their full food and accommodation costs, plus a contribution towards tuition fees, why shouldn’t asylum seekers too?

      I also suspect many would find friends or relatives to stay with if they weren’t being housed for free by the state. 

      And for those whose claims are refused, how is this supposed to work? If they disappear, there’s no realistic way to enforce repayment. 

    8. Captain_English on

      I’m left of centre and I don’t think this is a bad idea. It offsets the draw of coming to the UK for economic fakers without adding significant barriers to genuine refugees.

      My main concern is that it will push asylum seekers further in to the grey economy as they seek to avoid the payment. They need to couple repayment of this £10,000 against any future progress towards citizenship or ILR.

      We charge students £10,000 a year plus interest. This is not performative or cruel. They’re given safe harbour here, after much more taxpayer money is spent on them, it’s entirely reasonable that they are asked to repay it. Especially as this is recovered after asylum is granted. There’s no upfront payment required, no additional barrier.

    9. Should mirror the 9% levy on students. The cost of asylum before they starting claiming regular benefits is 41k. Should charge that to them like we do our students. But the issue is simply so many end up on benefits where this won’t apply anyway and actually hurts the genuine refugees we do want.

    10. deyterkourjerbs on

      This was a Tory idea and it wasn’t a bad one. If students have to put up with this plan 2 stuff, they can too.

    11. RecentTwo544 on

      As someone married into an immigrant family who are largely now all citizens and pay a LOT of tax, I’m right behind this.

      It’s basically „student loans – asylum seeker edition“.

      I cannot think of a single reason why this is a bad idea.

      I say this as someone of a very left wing opinion – I support the right of anyone to come to our country, provided they abide by our laws and pay their way. Give them some leeway while they’re still totally fucked having fled a shit-hole, fine. Earn money and pay back that good grace, seems totally reasonable.

    12. pepperino132 on

      Bet it costs more than that per person to implement collection and enforcement and administration.

    13. SkipperTheEyeChild1 on

      This is such a stupid policy. Claim asylum then work in black economy, free! Claim asylum then try to integrate, big bill. Are these people fucking stupid?

    14. How is the government supposed to reform and fix the system when some on the left refuse to accept anything that isn’t just ‚give refugees and immigrants whatever they want‘

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