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Britain's asylum system has become unfair to taxpayers and working families. Failed asylum seekers cost £4 billion annually in hotel accommodation while 100,000 people remain in the system at public expense. Offering families to leave voluntarily represents massive savings compared to yearly hotel costs per family, allowing for more investment in the British public.
Temporary protection schemes harm refugees' physical and mental health. Evidence from Denmark shows deportation threats prevent people from achieving a "baseline of safety" needed to recover from trauma, while Australian studies link temporary visas to higher PTSD and depression rates. These policies push vulnerable families into poverty and homelessness rather than allowing them to rebuild their lives with dignity.
The idea that individuals who have smuggled themselves into the U.K. will be offered more than the average wage to leave the country using the taxpayer's money is a disgrace. Instead of fixing the problem at the source and immediately removing people who don't deserve to be in the U.K., the British state is financially rewarding those who cheat the system.