Immigrants less likely to claim benefits than general population

The Daily Mail's undue emphasis on focusing on benefits claimants as immigrants disproportionately is not backed up by Office for National Statistics data.

As reported in today’s Daily Mail, a smaller proportion of UK residents born outside the country receive welfare payments or tax credits than the population at large. Buried in paragraph seven in an article entitled “Migration wave means a third of Londoners were born abroad”, the biggest selling mid-market newspaper in the country reports:

“Fewer of the population of those born abroad claim state benefits or tax credits than native-born Britons.”

In fact, as demonstrated by the Office of National Statistics research paper on which the article is based, migrants are less likley to benefit from welfare payments or tax payments in all but two regions of the country, where the difference between native and non-native-born is negligible.


However, as the immigration debate has hotted up, the Daily Mail has published a series of articles focusing on immigrants claiming benefits, legally and fraudulently. They include:

• “Jail for immigrant who built a mansion from benefit fraud” (25 November 2006)

• “Benefits bill for EU immigrants for eastern European migrants hits £125m” (22 August 2007)

• “Polish migrants living in Britain claiming £21million for children left behind” (22 January 2008)

• “Hundreds of thousands of migrants are here for handouts, says senior judge” (29 July 2009)

• “An open door to benefit tourists: EU warns Britain it can’t stop thousands more migrants claiming welfare handouts” (22 September 2010)

 But an undue emphasis on focusing on benefits claimants as immigrants disproportionately is not backed up by this ONS data.

71 Responses to “Immigrants less likely to claim benefits than general population”

  1. Kevin Arscott

    RT @leftfootfwd: Immigrants less likely to claim benefits than general population: http://bit.ly/ewbJt6 writes @DanielElton

  2. Duncan Stott

    Also bear in mind that “foreign-born” will include many British citizens who have been here for years, some decades. The same paper shows that the majority of foreign-born residents came here before 1999.

    Are there statistics that look at immigrants here on visas or from the EU?

  3. Duncan Stott

    RT @leftfootfwd: Immigrants less likely to claim benefits than general population: http://bit.ly/ewbJt6 writes @DanielElton

  4. Rocky Hamster

    RT @leftfootfwd: Immigrants less likely to claim benefits than general population http://bit.ly/i1f8e6

  5. Democratic Society

    RT @leftfootfwd: Immigrants less likely to claim benefits than general population: http://bit.ly/ewbJt6 writes @DanielElton

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