Anthony Albaneses promise to slash immigration in half is looking shallow with the big overseas influx continuing.
In the year to July, 432,150 migrants on a net basis moved to Australia.
This was despite the May Budget forecasting a fall in net overseas migration to 260,000 by the end of this financial year, 2024-25, compared with 528,000 in 2022-23.
Institute of Public Affairs deputy executive director Daniel Wild said the latest Australian Bureau of Statistics data highlighted how immigration was still growing at unsustainably high levels.
The federal government has repeatedly promised to cut migration levels yet, month after month, migration intake records continue to be exceeded, he said.
It is clear the Prime Minister has no intention to rein in the unsustainable migration intake.
The big influx of international students has led to a rental crisis in the capital cities, with tenants braving long queues and suffering from housing stress.
International students make up a big share of Australias permanent and long-term intake. Education Minister Jason Clare last month announced a 270,000 cap on foreigners coming here to study in 2025.
Anthony Albaneses promise to slash immigration in half is looking shallow with the big overseas influx continuing
He argued this would help Australia slash immigration, as promised in the Budget.
What it does, in first instance, is help us to meet that net overseas migration number, he said on Wednesday.
Our universities dont run the migration system in Australia, a government should.
This will help us to do that.
Australias permanent intake, covering skills migrants, is being capped at 185,000 in 2024-25 which means the government will only achieve its goal of reducing overall immigration levels if theres a big departure of international students once they graduate.
Record-high immigration levels have failed to arrest Australias falling productivity levels.
Australia has also been in a per capita recession since the March quarter of 2023 where economic output for every Australian has been flat or shrinking.
The massive population increase has failed to significantly boost economic activity in the face of the Reserve Banks 13 interest rate rises in 2022 and 2023.
Australias economy grew by just 1 per cent in 2023-24, marking the slowest annual growth since 1991 outside of a pandemic, as population pressures added to the cost-of-living crisis.
Australias out-of-control migration intake is unsustainable and making Australians poorer, Mr Wild said.
The rapid population increase has also been linked to the rental crisis in the capital cities, which have an ultra-tight vacancy rate of 1.3 per cent.
Australians have had a gutful of being treated like mugs by the federal government when it comes to its never-ending, unplanned mass migration program, Mr Wild said.
This policy failure is causing immense economic and social pressure amid a housing and cost-of-living crisis.
The big influx of international students has led to a rental crisis in the capital cities, with tenants braving long queues and suffering from housing cost stress (pictured is a Bondi open home inspection)
In the year to July, 165,443 new homes were approved.
This was well short of Labors 240,000 annual target as part of its plan to build 1.2million homes over the five years to June 2029.
With 2.5 people on average per household, the latest building approvals tally meant Australia would still have a shortage of 18,542 homes to cater for the new migrants, once those houses and units were built.
The ABS wont have updated building activity data on completed homes, for the June quarter, until October 9.
But in the year to March, 171,667 homes were completed.
Building approval numbers are much lower than they were in 2022, and soaring construction costs have seen construction companies make up a quarter of insolvencies during a population surge.
Reserve Bank Governor Michele Bullock has also ruled out any rate cut in 2024 with the headline inflation rate of 3.8 per cent well above the RBAs 2 to 3 per cent target.
Institute of Public Affairs deputy executive director Daniel Wild said high immigration was making Australia poorer
The out-of-control migration intake is one of the largest social and economic failures in Australias history, Mr Wild said.
It is totally unplanned for, and has fuelled a perfect storm of high inflation, declining household incomes, and record and rising house prices and rents.
The evidence linking high immigration with the property market is mixed.
Simon Pressley, the managing director of buyers agency group Propertyology, said local economic performance was a bigger driver of house prices than overseas migration.
Most overseas migrants dont buy a property within the first seven years of moving here - they rent, he told Daily Mail Australia.
So, when someone rents that doesnt affect the value of the asset, it affects the price that they are paying for rent.
The existing resident population: they are the ones who have the biggest influence on housing demand because people dont stay put all the time.
Sydneys median house price rose by 5.7 per cent in the year to August to $1.471million, CoreLogic data showed.
But Melbourne, another city with a high overseas migration intake, saw its mid-point house price fall by 1.1 per cent to $929,715 after Victorias Labor government introduced a flat $975 annual investor tax.
The cities with the biggest house price surges are getting a bigger influx of interstate migration, with Brisbanes median house price rising by 14.1 per cent over the year to $966,382 as Perth values soared 24.3 per cent to $818,839.
Daily Mail Australia contacted Mr Albaneses office for comment.