The Government is unaware of how many foreign workers are staying in the country after their visas expire, a cross-party committee of MPs has warned.
The Public Accounts Committee (PAC), which examines the value for money of Government projects, said the Home Office had not analysed exit checks since the skilled worker visa route was introduced in 2020 under the Conservatives.
Committee chairman Sir Geoffrey Clifton-Brown said the Government had failed to gather “basic information” including whether or not those workers have fallen victim to exploitation.
“There has long been mounting evidence of serious issues with the system, laid bare once again in our inquiry,” he said.
“And yet basic information, such as how many people on skilled worker visas have been modern slavery victims, and whether people leave the UK after their visas expire, seems to still not have been gathered by Government.”
The PAC report said there was “widespread evidence of workers suffering debt bondage, working excessive hours and exploitative conditions”, but adds there is “no reliable data on the extent of abuses”.
Some 1.18 million people applied to come to the UK on the visa – designed to attract skilled workers in the wake of Brexit – between its launch in December of that year and the end of 2024.
Around 630,000 of those were dependants of the main visa applicant.
But the PAC said there is both a lack of knowledge around what people do when their visas expire and that the expansion of the route in 2022 to attract staff for the struggling social care sector led to the exploitation of some migrant workers.
It noted that the fact a person’s right to remain in the UK is dependent on their employer under the sponsorship model means migrant workers are “vulnerable to exploitation”.
Figures published earlier this year suggested thousands of care workers have come to the UK in recent years under sponsors whose licences were later revoked, in estimates suggesting the scale of exploitation in the system.
The Home Office said more than 470 sponsor licences in the care sector had been revoked between July 2022 and December 2024 in a crackdown on abuse and exploitation.
More than 39,000 workers were associated with those sponsors since October 2020, the department said.
In its report, published on Friday, the PAC said: “The cross-government response to tackling the exploitation of migrant workers has been insufficient and, within this, the Home Office’s response has been slow and ineffective.”
It also noted a lack of information around what happens to people when their visas expire, stating that the Home Office had said the only way it can tell if people are still in the country is to match its own data with airline passenger information.
Earlier this week legislation to end the recruitment of care workers from abroad was introduced to Parliament as part of a raft of immigration reforms.
The move has sparked concerns from the adult social care sector, with the GMB union describing the decision as “potentially catastrophic” due to the reliance on migrant workers, with some 130,000 vacancies across England.
The Home Office believes there are 40,000 potential members of staff originally brought over by “rogue” providers who could work in the sector while UK staff are trained up.
Sir Geoffrey warned that unless there is “effective cross-government working, there is a risk that these changes will exacerbate challenges for the care sector”.
Adis Sehic, policy manager at charity the Work Rights Centre, said: “This report is yet more damning evidence that the principle of sponsorship, which ties migrant workers in the UK to their employer, is inherently unsafe for workers and, in our view, breaches their human rights.
“Structural reform of the sponsorship system must urgently be undertaken if this Government is to meaningfully uphold its commitments relating to employment and human rights.”
The PAC said the Home Office should work with relevant government bodies to “establish an agreed response to tackling exploitation risks and consequences” and identify what data is needed, including “how to better understand what happens to people at the end of their visa and the effectiveness of checks on sponsoring organisations”.
It said a clear method must be set out on assessing what happens when visas end, “specifically what measures are in place or will be put in place to record when people leave the country”.
The Home Office has been contacted for comment.
Additional reporting by the Press Association
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