“
H2 2022
Cleared approximately 400,000 visa backlog
The government successfully met its year-end target,reducingthe total backlog to 600,000— a reduction of around 400,000 since they took office in May.
“
This financial year
Net overseas migration forecast to recover
MIA Reform Recommendation 1
Progressively increase migration to 230,000 per year
Continue increasing the migration programme by around 20% over the coming years, reaching approximately 230,000 per annum.
On one hand, Australia’s labour shortages cannot be resolved quickly. On the other, doing sowould also help address the issue of “permanent temporary” residents.
MIA Reform Recommendation 2
Use occupation groups in the list; determine eligible visas by skill level
MIA Reform Recommendation 3
Expand skills assessment bodies to introduce competitive pressure
MIA Reform Recommendation 4
If TSMIT ($53,900) is raised, regional areas should receive a concession
The mainstream proposals are an increase to $65,000 (aligned with CPI since 2013) or $70,000.
MIA considers both figures too blunt a measure.Occupation, location, and seniority all significantly affect wage rates —for example, a hospitality role in a mining region may pay far above the national average.
MIA recommends abandoning a single TSMIT and instead applying annual market salary rates by occupation and specific location.
MIA Reform Recommendation 5
Regional migration issues — abolish Subclass 494
MIA Reform Recommendation 6
All employer-sponsored occupations to have a PR pathway; raise the age cap
MIA Reform Recommendation 7
Introduce a new “workplace justice” visa
Other recommendations relevant to us
MIA put forward 30 recommendations in total. We won’t cover every one here, but below are a few particularly relevant to our clients:
As the peak body representing MARA-registered migration agents and a key bridge between agents and migration policymakers,their day-to-day work with visa and migration applications means their analysis and recommendations tend to be more practical and nuanced.
On the practical side, their recommendations foroccupation lists and assessing authoritiesdo not simply advocate wholesale abolition. Rather, they are driven bya genuine aim to help each migration applicant — recommending simplification, uniform standards, and breaking monopolies. They also argue that TSMIT should not be set as a blanket figure.
On the detailed side, they specifically raised Subclass 494494, which has averaged fewer than 4,500 applications per financial year since its introduction.It is one of the least popular skilled migration pathways — the entry threshold and PR conversion requirements are genuinely cumbersome, leading the visa to be quietly overlooked.
As a professional body, MIA has offered practical, technically grounded recommendations. At the same time, it’s clear they stand firmly on the side of applicants and agents. We hope their recommendations will be carefully considered and refined in a way that balances the interests of all parties.
Previous articles —Click image to read
2022 Australian Skilled Migration Year in Review | A Historic Year Together!
Latest Entry Requirements for Travellers from China to Australia — Official FAQs Answered
Complete Guide: Points-Based Skilled Migration Process and Popular State Nomination Requirements
Complete Guide: Points-Based Skilled Migration Process and Popular State Nomination Requirements
Complete Guide: Points-Based Skilled Migration Process and Popular State Nomination Requirements
Complete Guide: Points-Based Skilled Migration Process and Popular State Nomination Requirements
Migration News Group
2022
Step 1: Long-press to add our customer service contact

Step 2: Once added, please
Study · Migration · Visas — We Are the Professionals



Attention!Please verifygenuineNewstars consultants!
Study & Migration Enquiries — Local Contacts by City

Sydney

Melbourne

Canberra

Brisbane

Adelaide

Hobart

Beijing

Guangzhou
Follow the Newstars WeChat Official Account
Reply in the Official Accountwith any of the following numbers or keywords (not via article comments)to receive the most timely and professional migration news!Reply [A] to view the full index (all topics included)!
Reply:0000 → View 16 Nov policy update (Subclass 491 + skilled migration points)
Reply: 000 → Latest visa/citizenship processing wait times
Reply: 001 → Latest Subclass 189 EOI official report
Reply: 002 → Subclass 189 Skilled Independent
Reply: 003 → Subclass 190 State Nomination by state
Reply: 004 → Subclass 489 Skilled Regional (state-nominated)
Reply: 005 → Student entrepreneur and investor migration
Reply: 006 → Parent migration visas
Reply: 007 → Employer-sponsored visas
Reply: 008 → Subclass 485 Graduate Work visa
Reply: 009 → Partner migration / points bonus
Reply: 010 → Work experience points
Reply: 011 → PY points bonus
Reply: 012 → NAATI/CCL points bonus
Reply: 013 → Regional area points bonus
Reply: 014 → Visitor visa
Reply: 015 → Working holiday visa
Reply: 016 → TAFE study abroad
Reply: 017 → Canada migration for international students in Australia
Reply: 018 → Subclass 407 Training visa
Reply: 019 → Subclass 408 Temporary Activity visa
Reply: 020 → New Zealand migration
2023 Recommendations
400,000 fewer backlog cases by year end! Is the temporary-to-permanent pathway the focus of reform?Tap“Original link” for the Migration Weekly Bulletin — video edition