The news that Pope Leo XIV has chosen to make a pastoral visit to the Canary Islands, focusing on the migrant crisis, might seem a world away from Threadneedle Street. Yet for those of us who watch the balance sheets of state power, it is a flashing red light on the dashboard of UK border security. The Canary Islands have become the new gateway for irregular migration into Europe, with arrivals up 40% year on year. And where the migrant flows go, the fiscal burdens follow.
The Holy Father’s mission is a moral one, but the economic implications are inescapable. Every migrant who reaches European soil without documentation becomes a liability on the public purse. In the UK, the cost of processing asylum claims has ballooned to nearly £4 billion annually, with hotels housing asylum seekers costing the taxpayer £8 million a day. This is not sustainable. It is a bond yield waiting to default.
What the Pope’s visit underscores is the failure of European border security. The Schengen area is porous. The Mediterranean route is shifting west. And the UK, despite Brexit, remains a target. The small boats crossing the Channel are a symptom, not the cause. The cause is a lack of effective deterrence and a humanitarian system that incentivises dangerous journeys.
Capital flight is not just about money. It is about people fleeing capital destruction at home. The migrants arriving in the Canaries are fleeing economic collapse, climate change, and conflict. They are the human face of market failure. Yet the response from European governments has been to kick the can down the road. The EU’s new migration pact is a fudge. It will not reduce the flow. It will merely redistribute the cost.
For the UK, the lesson is clear. We cannot rely on European neighbours to secure our borders. The Rwanda scheme was a start, but it is bogged down in the courts. We need a system that processes claims offshore, deters economic migration, and swiftly returns those without a valid claim. Anything less is a drain on the exchequer and a moral hazard for the thousands who risk their lives.
The Pope’s mission is a reminder that migration is a global market. Supply and demand. If the price of entry is low, the queues will be long. The UK must raise the price of illegal entry through enforcement and legal pathways that prioritise the most vulnerable. Otherwise, we are just subsidising the smugglers.
In the bond markets, risk is priced in. The UK’s sovereign credit rating already reflects the strain of unfunded liabilities. Migration is one of them. The next gilt auction will tell us whether the market believes the government has a credible plan. So far, the answer is no.
The Canary Islands are a warning, not a charity case. The market is watching.








