Alex Hern rebuts Grayling's horrible misuse of statistics in the Telegraph, and asks if this represents the government's real attitude to evidence based policy
Chris Grayling is spinning away in the Telegraph today, implying that immigrants are likely to be benefit cheats. Needless to say, the statistics don’t quite show what the minister for work and pensions says they do.
In his piece, Grayling writes:
[Waiting until the introduction of Universal Credit] and doing nothing was not good enough. So we’ve done a complex research exercise to match information about people’s nationality when they entered the country with the list of people now on benefits.
As a result we now know that there are 371,000 people who were foreign nationals when they entered Britain who are claiming benefits. The majority come from outside the EU…
All of this represents an almighty mess. It should never have been allowed to happen. And Labour should be embarrassed by what it left behind.
But Jonathan Portes reveals the problem behind claiming 371,000 foreign-born benefit claimants represents an “almighty mess”:
371,000 people, out of a total of 5.5 million, who are claiming working-age benefits, were non-UK nationals when they first registered for a National Insurance number; of these 258,000 were from outside the European Economic Area. Of this latter group, 54% are now British nationals, so presumably the rest are not.
Meanwhile, for comparison, we can also look at the Labour Force Survey. This says that, of the total number of people in work (about 29 million), some 4 million were born abroad. Of these 2.7 million were born outside the EEA. And of these, 1.3 million are not (yet) British citizens.
So, summing up these numbers in very rough percentages:
• migrants represent about 13 per cent of all workers, but only seven per cent of out-of-work claimants;
• migrants from outside the EEA represent about nine to ten per cent of all workers, but about five per cent of out-of-work claimants
• foreign nationals from outside the EEA represent about 4.5 per cent of all workers, but a little over two per cent of out-of-work benefit claimants.
Rather than showing that migrants come to the UK from overseas to leach of the welfare state, the data in fact shows that migrants impose less than proportionate costs on the UK.
Of course, this isn’t Grayling’s spin. Forced to defend his dog-whistle anti-immigrant rhetoric on the Today programme, he argued that:
It’s important to have a system everyone has confidence in… [and it’s] extraordinary we didn’t have any data on nationality of benefit claimants… otherwise how can people have confidence that we are paying out to people who are entitled.
When confronted with the fact that his own data has little evidence of benefit tourism, he claimed:
We have yet to establish the full picture. […] It may be there isn’t a problem now… but we have seen in recent yrs illegal immigrants get NI numbers…
I want to make sure we know fully what is going on and can answer questions in Parliament about it.
This government’s attitude to evidence is fast becoming clear: Ignore it if you can, spin it if you can’t, and act on it only if it confirms your prejudices.
See also:
• How to create a Telegraph migration scare story – Matt Cavanagh, September 9th 2011
• Express and Mail fail the migration stats test – Sunder Katwala, August 26th 2011
• The bad news in yesterday’s employment stats (and it’s not about migration) – Declan Gaffney, July 14th 2011
• When will politicians stop taking the public for fools on immigration? – Declan Gaffney, July 2nd 2011
• New Migration Watch report misses opportunity for balanced debate on migration – Ruth Grove-White, February 22nd 2011
58 Responses to “DWP evidence says migrants aren’t benefit cheats. DWP’s spin says…”
Awake!
er…
if they claim they are draining, and if they take a job then a local has to claim. What’s hard about this for the writer to get.
1. There is a max number of jobs the economy can createw
2. If a migrant worker takes a job, there is, erm, 1 less job available. so a national has 1 less opportunity of getting a job.
NOT hard.
Or is the writer just excusing the facts that 2.5 MILLION were let in by the last lot (yawn)
Redisbleu
Oh FFS….I came to this country over 12 years ago, got married, held a job, still have one. I only just started claiming benefits last year under the urging of friends and social services who was horrified I was trying to take care of my son (a UK citizen, born to a man born-and-bred in Yorkshire). I care for my son 24/7 because his English father (who works in the banking centre, by the way) would find caring for his son “too expensive”. His own words.
I get paid a grand total of £55 a week for caring for my son – if he were put in residential care, it would cost £100,000 a year. Read that again: a year.
Since it seems they couldn’t kick the scrounger angle without us rising up getting irked, they’re now doing the great English xenophobic fallback – the immigrant scrounger. As has already been pointed out, it’s a ridiculously minimal amount of people like myself receiving benefits, just like “DLA fraud” but cold hard facts don’t seem to be stopping anyone. But I won’t be having it any more than the “disabled scrounger” rhetoric.
Bill Kruse
This concern about being able to answer questions in Parliament seems to be newly come to Minister Grayling. Just recently he was asked how people in wheelchairs, recently declared fit to work by the wildly expensive and generally wrong Atos tests, were supposed to get to any available work given that the Coalition are cutting all the bus services. His total reply was that this was a mess he’d inherited from the previous Labour goverment (the lady posing the question being a Labour MP, I should point out). Dearie me. Here we have a Minister of the Crown in one of the most advanced countries in the world with all the facilities at his disposal, and all he can do is fudge the question, this live on television, in front of the rest of the world, from the mother of Parliaments. Someone remind me, what are we paying him for again?
Lilacwheelz
'It’s important to have a system everyone has confidence in' says minister while trying to undermine said confidence http://t.co/d2EjkOVd
Chris Salter
RT @leftfootfwd: DWP evidence says migrants aren't benefit cheats. DWP's spin says… http://t.co/twajpFaq #ppnews #wrb #spartacusreport