Rishi Sunak’s plan to send asylum seekers to Rwanda could balloon to a cost £3.9bn, at a bill of £230,000 per asylum seeker, a think tank has revealed.
The potential ‘hidden costs’ uncovered by analysis from the Institute for Public Policy Research (IPPR) are orders of magnitude higher than official estimates of £150,000 per person, and a considerable advance on the £270m paid by the end of 2023.
MPs will vote on Monday (18 March) on the government’s scheme to send asylum seekers to Rwanda, where they will have their claims processed. After the Supreme Court found the proposal to be unlawful, Sunak’s new law attempts to deem Rwanda a “safe country”, despite the Home Office’s insistence the plan also works as a deterrent.
“Aside from the ethical, legal and practical objections, the Rwanda scheme is exceptionally poor value for money. For it to break even, it will need to show a strong deterrent effect, for which there is no compelling evidence. Under the government’s plans, billions could be sent to Rwanda to remove people who have already arrived irregularly since the Illegal Migration Act was passed,” said Marley Morris, IPPR associate director for migration, trade and communities.
“The only winner from this scheme appears to be the Rwandan government itself, which has already secured hundreds of millions without doing much at all.”
Costs would reach £3.9bn if every asylum seeker stayed in Rwanda for five years, or £1.1bn if they all left straight away, according to the IPPR.