New research carried out by the British Red Cross and LSE’s Centre for the Analysis of Social Exclusion (CASE) has estimated that extending the support provided to new refugees in the UK could benefit the economy by £7 million pounds each year, outweighing the costs of doing so by up to three times.

In the UK, a person seeking asylum is entitled to £37.75 each week and access to asylum support accommodation. However, after being granted refugee status, people have only four weeks before they are evicted from asylum accommodation and all asylum benefit payments are stopped.

But according to new calculations from LSE, extending the support available to newly recognised refugees from four to eight weeks could save the UK economy millions of pounds each year by easing the pressure on Local Authorities, the NHS and charities – who are currently picking up the costs of destitution and homelessness among new refugees.

According to the analysis, Local Authorities would benefit most under the proposed changes, saving more than £2 million each year as a direct result of giving new refugees longer to find permanent housing and therefore reducing the use of more costly Local Authority temporary accommodation.

The NHS and mental health services could also be set to save up to £1 million each year by reducing the need for NHS interventions, particularly in response to complex mental health needs, which are five times more likely among refugees than the general population.

The research also estimates that preventing rough sleeping – which at a conservative estimate affects between five and seven per cent of new refugees – could benefit the public purse by up to £3.2 million each year.

The British Red Cross, who commissioned the research, is now calling on the government to fix the loop-hole in the asylum system by extending the move-on period by four weeks to at least 56 days, mirroring the period provided to prevent homelessness under the Homelessness Reduction Act 2017.

Currently over 5,000 people a year would benefit from this simple change.

Last year the charity, which is the UK’s largest provider of support to refugees and people seeking asylum, supported over 16,500 people to access essentials such as food, clothing and sanitary items. Almost 20% of people given this support had refugee status, and therefore may have benefited from an extension to the support available to them.

Dr Bert Provan, lead researcher at LSE, said: “For someone who has been granted protection in the UK, the moment should be one of joy and relief. But for too many refugees this momentary relief is immediately followed by panic.

“Successfully moving from asylum accommodation and subsidy payments can be difficult, highly stressful, and time consuming. This research not only suggests that giving people more time could reduce the risk of homelessness and destitution, but also result in a wide range of financial savings to the public purse.”

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