Single-lever policy simulation · immigration

Asylum acceptance rate

42%56%10-year projection

This report models the effect of raising the asylum acceptance rate from 42% to 56% — with every other government policy left unchanged — on community cohesion, projected over 10 years.

Bottom line

Improves Social cohesion and Political risk, with little downside in the model.

A single lever moved in isolation — which no real government does. Figures are modelled projections, not predictions. How the model works →

Direct effects

Social cohesion

mild improvement

Why: Higher acceptance means more long-term residents requiring integration — affects local-authority and community pressure depending on dispersal

Effect builds over 2–3 years⚑ contested assumption

Knock-on effects

Reached indirectly, as the direct effects propagate through the system. Ordering reflects how the effect spreads, not a literal sequence in time.

Political riskslight
Model output — exact figures
Social cohesion4852 (+4)
Political risk6059 (-1)

Index points on a 0–100 scale. Lower is better for pressure metrics; higher is better for outcomes like GDP and satisfaction.

Asylum acceptance rate: 42% → 56% · Britain 2036