I don’t have direct access to live updates right now, but I can share what’s widely reported recently about budget and migration policy from a few credible sources.
Direct answer
- Australia’s 2026-27 federal budget confirms the permanent migration cap at 185,000 places, with a strong emphasis on skilled migrants and onshore applications to address workforce needs.[3][4]
- France and other European countries have been adjusting migration budgets to fund reception facilities, faster processing, and digital tools, including biometric and work-permit portals, as part of broader migration management plans in 2025–2026.[8]
Key takeaways by region
If you want, I can:
- Narrow to a specific country (e.g., Australia or France) and pull the latest official budget papers or government summaries.
- Compare how the 2026-27 plans differ from 2025–26 in terms of caps, streams (skilled vs family), and processing reforms.
- Create a short, country-focused briefing with bullet points and a simple timeline.
Would you like me to focus on a particular country or provide a side-by-side regional comparison? If you want any direct quotes or official document references, I can pull those next.
Sources
Cyprus plans to spend €75 million on migration management in 2026, with one-third devoted to infrastructure and digital upgrades and €8 million to forced and voluntary returns. The budget also expands the EU Blue Card and integration programmes, offering both opportunities and compliance obligations for employers.
www.visahq.comOn 7 November the Finance Committee finished scrutinising the 2026 Budget. Migration-related credits are set to rise almost 7 %, with funds earmarked for biometric Entry/Exit kiosks and a new digital work-permit portal. The decisions point to quicker processing for business travellers, though staffing questions remain ahead of France’s full EES rollout.
www.visahq.comThe Federal Budget did not give any concrete advice on immigration policies or planning, it was hoped that the Government would announce the 2025-26 permanent Migration Program planning levels, but it did not.Ahead of the Federal Budget announcement the Government had indicated that the broad plan was to ‘manage the net overseas migration numbers down quite considerably’ according to Treasurer Jim Chalmers.That appears to be the case as Net Overseas Migration (NOM) is slowing and is forecast to
www.assentmigration.comThe budget has confirmed the number of permanent migrants to be allowed into Australia.
www.sbs.com.auThe federal government is also ‘optimising’ its migration points test to select ‘higher-skilled’ migrants.
7news.com.auThe 2025-26 Federal Budget left many questioning the lack of detail on Australia’s migration program. Despite its importance to economic growth, the budget papers omitted official migration intake numbers and major policy shifts, focusing instead on broad themes like visa integrity and digital transformation.
www.bdo.com.auRead post →
smartvisaguide.comWhat the Canadian government should do on immigration. Because true independence needs a new economic model.
www.policyalternatives.ca