Australians Want Less Migration But Support International Students: ANU Study

Australians Want Less Migration But Support International Students: ANU Study

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Pallavi
Pallavi Pathak
Assistant Manager Content
New Delhi, Updated on Feb 11, 2025 17:49 IST

The ANU survey also found that in many cases, media stories of migrants in Australia tend to be influencing public opinions rather than facts.

Australians Want Less Migration But Support International Students: ANU Study

Study in Australia: According to a new study led by The Australian National University (ANU), Australians have contradictory and inaccurate perceptions of Australian migrants who come from Pacific or Middle Eastern backgrounds and are unemployed than the actual case.

The survey of over 5,200 Australians revealed that they estimated unemployment among eight million foreign-born residents to be 143% higher than the actual figure. It also found that such perceptions are often due to media narratives of the migrants in Australia.

Study lead author Alyssa Leng, from the ANU Development Policy Centre, said, "While more people are migrating around the world, misperceptions about immigrants remain entrenched. Most respondents said they would prefer less migration to Australia overall, they showed strong support for more skilled migrants. Most respondents do not support a reduction in international student visa numbers. On this issue, the most frequently expressed response was for numbers to stay the same. People in Australia are also generally happy with the current direction of immigration policy settings towards the Pacific compared to the broader migration program. Our experiment found that support for increased immigration rose between four to seven per cent when respondents were shown narratives on how immigrants can help improve housing affordability in Australia. Consequently, highlighting the perceived negative impacts of immigration on housing affordability reduces support for increasing or maintaining current immigration levels. Interestingly, narratives around housing affordability have no discernible effect on people’s policy preferences regarding Pacific migration. Our study found that exposing people to facts on current migration levels induces support for relaxing visa requirements towards Pacific Island countries.”

ANU Study On Australian Migrants: More Details

Study co-author Ryan Edwards, Deputy Director of the ANU Development Policy Centre, said, "When people are exposed to a negative immigration narrative, it reduces public support for increasing or maintaining current migration levels. The different effects we observe from different types of narratives highlight the importance of standards of impartiality in media reporting, as emotive narratives can significantly shift views and thus political and policy outcomes."








Co-author Terence Wood, also from ANU, said, "The findings reveal widespread and contradictory misperceptions of migrants in Australia. They also indicate that public opinion and policy preferences on migration aren’t particularly well-informed. More accurate views might change or stabilise preferences and improve the quality of public debates and policy. Immigration policy preferences are not set in stone and can be influenced relatively easily by highlighting the costs and benefits of immigration to Australia or by providing facts. Policymakers shouldn’t necessarily take the public’s view as fixed, and there is scope to shape the narrative and consequently public opinion.”







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Pallavi Pathak
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With over 11 years of dedicated experience in the field of Study Abroad consulting and writing, Pallavi Pathak stands as a seasoned expert in providing compelling news articles and informative pieces tailored to the... Read Full Bio

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