Hargun Kaur

Hargun Kaur I am a registered Migration Consultant since 2016,graduated in ‘migration law’ from Victoria University Melbourne. Registration no(MARN); 1685805

Currently working in Australia as well from India.

Thank you White Hill Event and Team…🙏Gratitude
11/08/2024

Thank you
White Hill Event and Team…🙏
Gratitude

🎉 Exciting Announcement! 🎉

We are delighted to welcome BluSparrow Immigration and Education Consultants as our Gold Sponsor for the Harbhajan Mann Live Singing Event! 🌟

📅 Date: 24th August
🕕 Time: 6 PM onward
📍 Location: Bunjil Place, Narre Warren

A huge thank you to BluSparrow Immigration and Education Consultants for their generous support! 🌏
Service Provided: Professional visa and migration services
Address: 5 Easter Way, Cranbourne East, VIC 3977, Australia
Phone: +61 425 858 505
Email: [email protected]

Don’t miss out on this incredible evening of live music! Secure your tickets today at: https://www.bunjilplace.com.au/events/harbhajan-mann-live-concert?fbclid=IwY2xjawEjx4pleHRuA2FlbQIxMAABHSRqLg-XlWTueMeHHM73JMDPwsIg_LMNqxP_PDLEfM5VTglWJSgkYlE4_Q_aem_GLka8FE_DXaISiAYT82dkg

We look forward to seeing you there!

08/01/2024

Newspaper article from the Financial review

International student bubble bursts as visa crackdown bites

The number of people in Australia on student visas has finally turned around from its high point of 660,000 in September, indicating that Australia’s migration bubble has begun to burst.

The number of student visa holders living in Australia fell by 50,000 from a record 664,178 at the end of September to 612,099 at the end of November.

And while November witnessed yet another monthly record in offshore visa applications, fewer were approved than a year earlier.

The migration bubble appears to have finally burst as numbers start to decrease. Tamara Voninski

Although the majority of the decline will be students returning home before they come back for another semester of study in early 2024, visa approvals are lower than a year earlier.

The data suggests that Australia has hit peak migration, as The Australian Financial Review revealed in November, and has now begun a downward trajectory.

The government has been under intense pressure from voters and backbenchers over the impact that historically high migration levels are having on the rental market. Its major review of the migration system released in December contained a raft of reforms designed to w**d out non-genuine students and return integrity to the visa system.

However, the turnaround will put pressure on university budgets, which are also suffering from sluggish demand from domestic students.

Abul Rizvi, a migration expert, said 3000 fewer visas were granted based on offshore applications in November. That equates to an 11.7 per cent fall.

The greatest falls were from Nepal, down 32 per cent, Colombia, 26 per cent, and the Philippines and India, both down by more than 200 applications.

Mr Rizvi said that was offset to some degree by a spike in demand, particularly from China (up 46 per cent, to 7991) and Vietnam (39 per cent), which is probably linked to the government’s announcement that students will be required to have higher English-language proficiency to qualify for a visa.

He said the reasons behind the lower approval rates were not clear, although greater scrutiny of applications particularly from some countries and some regions was most likely one explanation.

“The government must find a way to reduce demand, particularly from low-performing students who are destined for immigration limbo in Australia,” Mr Rizvi said.

“While the planned increase in English-language requirements will dampen demand somewhat, this effect may be temporary as students improve their English-language skills and resit English language tests, particularly as IELTS [the International English Language Testing System] now allows students to resit a single skill element rather than resitting the whole test.”

However, the government’s decision to apply far greater scrutiny to student visa applications from people already in Australia would start to have an impact on numbers early in the new year.

While onshore visa applications increased from 10,204 in November 2022 to 12,408 in November last year, the approval rate fell from 99.6 per cent to 90.1 per cent.

Onshore visa applications have been strongly implicated in nefarious behaviours of students, colleges and education agents rorting the visa system for non-genuine students to access the jobs market.

Mr Rizvi said he also expected to see an increase in visa cancellations as the new rules are introduced and the Department of Home Affairs scrutinises visa applicants more closely.

International students have returned en masse but numbers should start to moderate in the coming months.

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06/01/2024

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From 1 July 2023, the Albanese Government belatedly started tightening the student visa policy it inherited from the Coalition.

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06/01/2024

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Despite the Government’s $160 million package to address the massive growth in asylum seekers, November 2023 data suggests little change in recent trends.

New Ministerial Direction on Student visa processing priorities….
20/12/2023

New Ministerial Direction on Student visa processing priorities….

Find out about Australian visas, immigration and citizenship.

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20/12/2023

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Housing and welfare groups call on Anthony Albanese and Peter Dutton to show leadership amid rise in ‘nonsense’ rhetoric

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14/12/2023

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Welcome to The Australian's live politics blog, Politics Now, covering the latest from Canberra and around the country.

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14/12/2023

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Australia has 650,000 overseas students due to a surge in arrivals after the pandemic.

11/12/2023

Clare O’Neil to unveil smaller migration program and tougher rules for temporary visa holders

Australia will have a smaller overall migration intake under the landmark strategy the Albanese government will launch on ­Monday, with an emphasis on new pathways for permanent settlers and highly skilled workers, as well as tougher rules to eject the temporary visa holders the nation does not need to stay.

Home Affairs Minister Clare O’Neil will set out a mechanism to manage a more orderly and predictable migration inflow over the medium term, to help state governments in the planning of infrastructure and social services, with less emphasis on the current settings overwhelmingly driven by foreign student demand.

As well, officials say the strategy will simplify and make the goals of migration more coherent, after a wide-ranging review led by former top federal public servant Martin Parkinson, published in April, declared the visa system was broken and neither meeting the interests of locals or the migrants themselves.

A government source confirmed next week’s mid-year ­budget update would show a ­reduction in net overseas migration in coming years, to reflect recent visa vigilance and the new policy blueprint.

The new blueprint will articulate a clearer rationale for the permanent program, currently set at 190,000 places, but which drives less than two-fifths of the overall current influx.

Treasurer Jim Chalmers says responsible economic management has been a “defining feature” of the Albanese… government this year. “We are working for Australia to take the pressure off Australians, to strengthen Medicare and to build a future made in Australia in a world of churn and change,” Mr More
Federal government sources are confident a recent crackdown on pandemic-era visas for temporary workers, a higher rate of visa refusal for foreign students, and fewer visa extensions for working holiday makers will suppress the number of arrivals in coming years.

Already the rate of visa refusal for foreign students is on the rise, particularly for applicants from high-growth countries where ­immigration officials have detected fraudulent documentation and where it is suspected that the right to work, rather than study, is the primary motivation.

As well, the federal government is ending a pandemic-era visa for about 120,000 temporary workers and is addressing longstanding visa-integrity issues that have undermined public confidence and led to worker ­exploitation by unscrupulous ­operators.

The Albanese government has come under fire from its political opponents over the surprise population boom, claiming Labor has lost control of borders and is effectively running a “Big Australia” migration program by stealth.

The post-pandemic population boom has caught Treasury and monetary officials napping, producing a spike in home values and rents, and exposing debt-laden states to unrelenting pressure on services.

The influx of 172,000 foreigners with work rights in the first four months of this financial year, or 10,000 people a week, is hindering the ­Reserve Bank’s ability to read the underlying health of the economy and raising fears it could inflame homegrown inflation, which is running at just under 5 per cent or twice its three-decade average and the midpoint of the mandated target.

But the migrant-led population surge is keeping aggregate output growth in the economy in positive territory and easing skills shortages for employers in areas such as hospitality.

Treasury’s May estimate for the net migrant inflow in 2022-23 of 401,700 has been blown out of the water, as a record number of students, backpackers and workers on temporary visas hit these shores, and those already here were able to extend their stays to help employers fill a record high level of post-Covid vacancies.

In the year to March, net migration was 454,400, with new figures for the June quarter to be released on Thursday by the Australian Bureau of Statistics.

Experts predict the 2022-23 ­financial year produced a migrant inflow of close to 500,000, with the record influx continuing over the winter and autumn.

Treasury’s net overseas migration estimate in May for the current financial year is 316,000.

Last week, the ABS projected the population rose by 0.7 per cent in the September quarter, or 190,000 people, with migration likely accounting for about 80 per cent of the increase or 152,000.

But according to a source familiar with the Mid-Year Economic and Fiscal Outlook, in the latter part of the budget’s four-year planning period, and beyond into the medium term, net overseas migration will be scaled back under the influence of the changes to the visa system to below recent long-run averages of around 230,000 a year.

According to the Department of Home Affairs, since the start of July, the number of people here on student visas has increased by 104,000, or ­almost a fifth, to stand at a high of 673,000.

Other figures from the department show that in the four months to the end of October, the student visa approval rate for ­primary applicants fell to 79.6 per cent, from 85.7 per cent last financial year.

In the decade prior to the pandemic, the visa grant rate never fell below 90 per cent.

(Source: The Australian Newspaper)

The tightening of student visas has been most pronounced for the higher education sector, where the grant rate fell from 96 per cent during the pandemic to 80.4 per cent in the first four months of this financial year.

In a press conference in Sydney on Saturday, Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said his government had a “plan to fix migration” and would announce a new migration strategy this week to bring migration back to “sustainable levels”, noting parts of the migration system that had been “abused”.

“People are coming here, enrolling in courses that don’t really add substantially to either their skills base or to the national interest here. So, it’s not in the interests of our neighbours, nor is it in the interests of Australia, that there not be a crackdown on this,” Mr Albanese said.

“We have a plan to fix migration by ensuring Australia can get the skilled workers Australia needs, but putting an end to any abuse and any rorts,”

He said there was always going to be a jump in migration numbers post-COVID, and the population figures were lower than those projected before the borders were shut.

11/12/2023

Should Labor fail to rein in net migration as it promises, it may face the political consequences at the ballot box, writes Dr Abul Rizvi.

11/12/2023

Migration review to fast-track visa processing for the regions

Home Affairs Minister Clare O’Neil. The government will move to fast track visa processing times for migrants moving to regional Australia and has pledged to work closely with the states and territories to ensure population is better targeted over the long term as part of a major shake-up to the migration system.

Home Affairs Minister Clare O’Neil. The government will move to fast track visa processing times for migrants moving to regional Australia and has pledged to work closely with the states and territories to ensure population is better targeted over the long term as part of a major shake-up to the migration system.

The Albanese government will move to fast track visa processing times for migrants moving to regional Australia as it pledged to work closely with the states and territories to ensure population is better targeted over the long term as part of a major shake-up to Australia’s migration system.

The changes – set to be unveiled on Monday as part of Home Affairs Minister Clare O’Neil’s response to the migration review – are designed to meet critical workforce needs in regional Australia and help supercharge regional communities.

However, Labor has ignored calls to limit the use of the working holiday maker program despite concern the scheme is a key driver of exploitation with visa holders previously subject to underpayment, sexual harassment and workplace safety concerns.

The government has instead pledged to conduct a further review of the program and broader migration settings to ensure it “can better meet regional needs while not adding to worker exploitation”.

Sky News host James Macpherson says Albanese is looking to "crack down" on migration to focus on bringing in skilled workers. “Labor is looking to seize back control of the narrative on migration,” Mr Macpherson said. “After the detainee debacle of last month. “They now say Australia needs to crack down More
It comes after an interim migration system review led by former public service chief Martin Parkinson recommended that Labor end the ability for travellers to extend the visa beyond 12 months if the worker has spent 88 days employed in regional Australia.

The review said the primary focus of the visa should be for “cultural exchange” noting the visa plays an important role in some of Australia’s international relationships.

Farming groups have been fiercely opposed to any restrictions being placed on the visa because backpackers had become a critical part of the nation’s food system, while unions have been calling for the scheme to be abolished to protect workers from exploitation.

The government’s response more broadly underscored the need for a co-ordinated approach to workforce needs in the regions with regional Australia’s population forecast to grow by 0.8 per cent per year to 2031-31 compared to 1.2 per cent for capital cities.

It noted 2016 census data which indicated only about 14 per cent of migrants live outside capital cities compared to 34 per cent of the general population despite the range of existing place based policies.

The government also deepened its commitment to increasing skilled migration to help meet labour shortages in regional Australia.

“Migration can play a powerful role in revitalising regional communities and meeting critical workforce needs in regional Australia,” it said. “Regional migration works for migrants and for long-term regional development when supported by the policy levers that make migration successful, such as government planning, infrastructure investment and economic opportunities.”

The Albanese government has also committed to plan the nation’s migration intake over a longer-term horizon with better collaboration with states and territories to ensure it is best targeted to the areas which need it.

Labor will extend its planning period beyond 12 months in a bid to plan most effectively in the national interest and fill critical skills shortages such as in the technology and care economy.

“The existing short term planning approach for the permanent migration program does not effectively target migrants with the skills we need to meet current and emerging national challenges,” the response said. “This is especially important for regional Australia where the challenges that Australia faces as a nation are often experienced more acutely.”

Committee for Economic Development of Australia chief executive Melinda Cilento said Labor’s commitment to long-term migration planning with the states provided a “welcome and critical missing ingredient”.

“This will enable better long-term planning and investment in housing and infrastructure and should send clear signals about the scale and composition of our migration program,” she said.

“As current debates show, this is crucial to maintaining community confidence in and support for our migration system.”

(Source: financial Review newspaper)

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If you are living a dream, to be part of a great and culturally rich country Australia. You want to live, study or work here. We are here to assist you from your first step toward your wonderful journey. We are working since 2016 and we are professionals in our backyard, can handle all aspects of educational and migration needs. We provide you with thorough guidance from early stages to completion of your VISA and educational applications. We have provided our services to hundreds of student and migrant partner till now.We are committed to guide you on your specific profile, from initial consultation till finalising your application. We understand complications of migration law and sail you through to meet end results. We speak Punjabi, Hindi and ready to help you with any other language. We assist you through the entire process effectively to simplify your application needs. We are registered migration and educational consultants with AUSTRALIAN MIGRATION AGENT REGISTRATION AUTHORITY(MARN:1685805).

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