
Speaking on 24 October, Immigration Minister Tony Burke said he is “worried” about locking Australia into multi-year migrant-intake caps, arguing it would reduce the government’s ability to respond to economic shocks and labour-market needs. His comments come as the Department of Home Affairs drafts a four-year migration planning framework designed to provide greater predictability for states and employers.
Burke noted that current net-overseas-migration numbers are already 40 percent below the post-COVID peak, and he hinted that further softening is likely as housing and infrastructure pressures bite. While the permanent intake will stay at 185,000 visas for 2025-26, he wants “room to manoeuvre” year-to-year.
For corporations reliant on skilled visas (subclass 482, 186 and 191), the minister’s stance suggests annual program sizes could fluctuate more than previously expected, increasing the importance of ‘front-loading’ critical talent applications. Global mobility teams may need to adopt scenario planning for different quota environments and engage with state nomination programs as hedges.
Opposition spokesman Jonathan Duniam has called for transparent, data-led targets incorporating housing, health and education capacity. Business groups, meanwhile, fear that political heat over anti-immigration protests could prompt sharper cuts, potentially exacerbating skills shortages in construction, healthcare and technology.
The bottom line: while the Albanese government remains committed to skilled migration, companies should prepare for policy agility rather than certainty and ensure pipeline talent has contingency timelines built in.
Burke noted that current net-overseas-migration numbers are already 40 percent below the post-COVID peak, and he hinted that further softening is likely as housing and infrastructure pressures bite. While the permanent intake will stay at 185,000 visas for 2025-26, he wants “room to manoeuvre” year-to-year.
For corporations reliant on skilled visas (subclass 482, 186 and 191), the minister’s stance suggests annual program sizes could fluctuate more than previously expected, increasing the importance of ‘front-loading’ critical talent applications. Global mobility teams may need to adopt scenario planning for different quota environments and engage with state nomination programs as hedges.
Opposition spokesman Jonathan Duniam has called for transparent, data-led targets incorporating housing, health and education capacity. Business groups, meanwhile, fear that political heat over anti-immigration protests could prompt sharper cuts, potentially exacerbating skills shortages in construction, healthcare and technology.
The bottom line: while the Albanese government remains committed to skilled migration, companies should prepare for policy agility rather than certainty and ensure pipeline talent has contingency timelines built in.








