
The Greens asylum seeker policy, most of which was released this morning, adopts much of the logic of last year’s Houston Panel report — but, crucially, not all of it.
That report, by Angus Houston, Michael L’Estrange and Paris Aristotle, argued for a significant rebalancing of incentives for asylum seekers, away from “irregular” pathways and toward “regular” pathways — the incentive of more opportunities to reach Australia via our humanitarian resettlement program, and the disincentive of no advantage in reaching Australia by boat, courtesy of a re-established Pacific Solution.
At the core of the Greens policy is the belief that disincentives will never work (and what evidence, so far, is there to contradict them?), and we need to massively increase the incentives to use regular pathways, via a dramatic expansion in our humanitarian intake and more Indonesian processing centres. More of the latter in a moment.
The increase in Australia’s humanitarian intake from 20,000 to 30,000 (though 4000 of the additional 10,000 places would be reserved for family reunion) would represent a more-than-doubling in just under two years. The Houston Panel recommended eventually lifting our intake to 27,000 over an extended period, rather than 30,000. But the goal would be the same: to dramatically decrease the supply pressure, particularly by immediately taking 10,000 asylum seekers from the region, 3800 of them from Indonesia. The incentive to get into a boat would be reduced — additionally, because asylum seekers from refugee-producing countries would be allowed to travel to Australia by air as well.
And as the Greens point out, the cost of resettling such a significantly greater number of refugees — costed at an additional $2.5 billion — is far less than the cost of running offshore detention centres.
However, the policy raises a number of questions. It proposes a number of UNHCR-run “safe” asylum seeker processing centres in Indonesia, further increasing the attractiveness of Indonesia for asylum seekers who can reach it (whether the Greens have consulted with the Indonesian government about this isn’t clear).
However, there is no guarantee that reaching such a centre would guarantee you would reach Australia: the humanitarian program is capped at 30,000, including another 4000 for family reunion. What happens if the numbers of asylum seekers exceeds 30,000? If they reach Australia by boat, they won’t be detained beyond an initial period for screening — and they are guaranteed resettlement here.
In short, the Greens are relying on being able to permanently cut the supply of asylum seekers to below 30,000. But there may be those who are not content to wait in an Indonesian processing centre, and who want to get to Australia with their families to get on with their lives and end the uncertainty, or who have the money to fly to Australia. And more asylum seekers will be in Indonesia, and resettlement in Australia will be guaranteed if you can reach here by boat, even if Australia has already taken 30,000 people under its humanitarian program.
So the Greens policy will work well up until the 30,001st asylum seeker and at that point becomes unclear: what will happen to asylum seekers arriving after we’ve taken 30,000? Are they detained? Sent back to an Indonesian processing centre? It’s implicit, but the 30,000, in the absence of any offshore processing or PNG plan, isn’t a hard cap.
Still, it may be enough: in the absence of a major humanitarian crisis, the Greens’ policy may be sufficient. It would be cheaper, too, than running offshore detention centres and bribing less developed countries in our region to take our problem off our hands.
But the complete removal of disincentives — the Greens even propose presumably permanent “community detention” for those found to be a security risk — leaves the effectiveness of the policy in the hands of people smugglers and asylum seekers. Australia would be a more attractive destination than it is currently under the Greens’ policy, and the Greens have no answers for what happens if that drives asylum seeker numbers beyond their 30,000 cap.

66 thoughts on “Greens focus on incentives in asylum seeker policy”
dazza
July 31, 2013 at 5:37 pmwe’re still talking about it. This from before Christmas last year. http://www.crikey.com.au/2012/12/11/rintoul-challenging-bipartisan-myths-on-asylum-seekers/
Tamas Calderwood
July 31, 2013 at 5:52 pmWell put CML.
dazza: Fewer than 300 people arrived by boat between 2002-2007. Since Labor dismantled the previous government’s policies in 2008 almost 50,000 people have arrived.
The Pacific Solution worked. Maybe, just maybe Rudd’s PNG solution can work. This flow of people (most of whom discard all their papers before arriving – why?) is undermining our immigration program and it must be stopped.
michael r james
July 31, 2013 at 6:03 pmCML: I do NOT understand why The Greens, who represent around 10% of voters, think their policies should be foisted on to the other 90% of us. That is NOT democracy.
First, the Greens are simply enumerating clearly their policy. Voters can make their choice.
Second, your view of democracy is simplistic in the extreme. In polls only about 40% support K Rudd’s approach with 38% supporting Abbott. But the awful reality is that the only thing driving these policies is a small fraction of voters in a small number of swing seats: on this issue it is mostly Western Sydney where the swings are less than 10%. So with less than 10% of voters in less than 5% of seats, it is very roughly 66,000 voters. The Greens got 1.55 million votes last election and, though I don’t have poll info at my fingertips, I think we can be pretty sure the fraction of these that support their policy on asylum seekers (along with many ALP & Libs) is a heck of a lot more than 66,000 bogan xenophobes in Western Sydney that are hijacking policy.
It is THIS that is not democratic and I for one am fed up with so many important things (eg. building nothing but roads instead of PT) being dictated by these ignorant bogans. It is a non-democratic quirk of our electoral system and it would disappear if we had a PR or MultiMember system. The bogans would get a few of their ilk elected but they wouldn’t have control over policy, which is the way it should be.
Hamis Hill
July 31, 2013 at 6:25 pmFor all this analysis of the successful people “moving” business there aught to be a lot of people now able to write a good small business plan.
Like the asylum seekers all they need is the finance.
pretorius3
July 31, 2013 at 7:36 pmTamas, when you say a government program “works”…
There’s a lot in that, isn’t there?
I mean, Hitler’s Final Solution “worked” in the sense of murdering millions of people.
Stalin and Mao’s similar programs also “worked” by giving more people to the policy-makers.
Do you think they were good things too?
el tel
July 31, 2013 at 8:08 pmWe seem to have invoked Godwin’s Law at #15.
Bronwyn
July 31, 2013 at 8:33 pmThis scrutiny of the Greens policy seems to be more thorough than that of Rudd’s recent announcement. I think it also hints at the real question of what any of these asylum seeker policies are intended to achieve – are we really trying to stop people drowning at sea, or just to stop people getting here at all.
I think the flaw in all of the so-called policies and surrounding discussion is that it is premised on the idea that boats can in fact be stopped (and that if we don’t believe in adopting an inhumane solution we are either bleeding hearts who want to take everyone or don’t care about deaths at sea). Boats won’t be stopped, at least until the world is a slightly better place than it is right now.
Karly Rubins
July 31, 2013 at 9:53 pmTamas, you said that, “Fewer than 300 people arrived by boat between 2002-2007. Since Labor dismantled the previous government’s policies in 2008 almost 50,000 people have arrived.”
CML also expressed concern with the comment, “But what happens when there are 30,000, 50,000 or 100,000+ per/year, every year? Australia simply cannot afford, either economically or socially, to settle that number of people + their families.”
I think it’s important to remember that the Australian population naturally grows at a rate of approximately 7000 people per week. Therefore, 20 000 asylum seekers arriving on our shores only adds a few extra weeks population growth per year.
Essentially, it’s not a question of how many asylum seekers arrive in Australia – it’s what we do when they get here. Off shore processing centres cost Australia between 150-350k per person, per year. Whereas, if they were allowed to settle in Australia and obtain benefits such as the dole, it would only cost 10-20k per person, per year – with the majority of the money going back into our economy. You do the math.
Hamish Moffatt
July 31, 2013 at 10:19 pmSo why isn’t anyone seriously talking about Fraser’s proposal? Processing centre in Indonesia with successful refugees being resettled in Australia (more than current limit but not significantly more), and other countries (Canada, US in particular).
michael r james
July 31, 2013 at 10:29 pm@Hamish Moffatt at 10:19
Pay attention.
That IS the Greens policy. Why do you think Fraser is campaigning for Sarah Hanson-Young?