Miliband shouldn’t repeat the myth about immigrants’ impacts on wages

Ed Miliband shouldn’t let unsupported myths about immigration cloud his thinking on the issue.

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Ed Miliband today revealed Labour’s immigration strategy, in a speech much of the media saw as an “apology” for the previous government’s immigration record.

Ed-Miliband-IPPR-immigration-speechThe majority of what was said appears to have gone unchallenged, however, Miliband made one point about the impact of immigrants on wage levels that commentators have been quick to disprove.

He claimed:

“To have an effective immigration policy, we must also reform how our economy works so that it works for all working people in Britain, whoever they are and wherever they come from. That means tougher labour standards to do more to protect working people from their wages and conditions being undermined.

“And action to create a different kind of economy: one which offers working people rewarding and high-skill jobs. So what happened?

“First of all, as a result of immigration combined with weak labour standards in some sectors, there was a direct effect on wages, especially in lower skilled jobs.”

Jonathan Portes, writing for the Independent, referred to a number of sources that dispelled the overwrought myth of immigration affecting wage levels, as Chart 14 shows.

Chart 14:

Wage-growth-scatter-graph
A report (pdf) from IZA, the Institute for the Study of Labor, entitled “New Labour? The Impact of Migration from Central and Eastern European Countries on the UK Labour Market”, concluded:

Indeed, the impact of such a large and rapid migration shock on wages and unemployment is a crucial labour market issue. This is specially so given the heated public debate on migration – and in particular on migration from current and future accession countries.

Yet, there is currently very limited evidence on migration effects on the UK – and even less so on the  effects of the recent EU enlargement.

While a report (pdf) from the Centre for Research and Analysis of Migration (CReAM) states:

Despite negative media coverage, there is no evidence that this expansion led, on average, to a setback of wages of workers born in the UK.

 


See also:

Time to talk about integration 6 Mar 2012

Playing the blame game – it’s all the immigrants fault… 20 Jan 2012

DWP evidence says migrants aren’t benefit cheats. DWP’s spin says… 20 Jan 2012

Immigration policy should support UK economic growth, not undermine it 5 Dec 2011

So is Britain really “full up”? 1 Nov 2011


 

Miliband shouldn’t let unsupported myths about immigration cloud his thinking on the issue.

 


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48 Responses to “Miliband shouldn’t repeat the myth about immigrants’ impacts on wages”

  1. Anonymous

    Great, where’s the peer reviewed study showing this? After all, anything that obvious WILL have been studied.

  2. Blarg1987

    And I was talking about bus drivers, plumbers, and every day jobs, that most ordinary people can do with a bit of time and investment as well as an appropiate salary to supportthemselves which seems to be the thing lacking from most companies.

  3. Anonymous

    “Bit”? Plummer is a vocational skill, ffs, a trained profession.

    (No offence, but this is exactly the problem, a bias against technical/hands-on jobs in English society. I’m in a creative job for which I have a talent, but I worked for some years as technician and the snobbery…)

    And the thing is, without the experts they won’t set up here. They might need two experts and a hundred normal people, but without the experts? Not happening. They can get the normal people anywhere.

  4. Adam Ladley

    Though on average there isn’t any evidence of a setback in wages, it is likely that for those on lower incomes there will have been a setback.

  5. stickyourpeerreview

    Fake Labour are so out of touch with Real Labour it’s frightening.

Comments are closed.