The UK is failing to make the most of the skills and talents of its migrant population

The underutilisation of talent in the migrant population reflects a failure of integration

 

Too often ‘migrants’ are lumped together in policy and public debates as a single population group. Yet the people who come to settle in the UK are highly diverse. This is reflected in the varied employment outcomes experienced by different groups within the migrant population, often reflecting dynamics that are given insufficient attention by policy makers.

Migrants coming from outside of the EU face the greatest challenges to integration in the UK labour market. In 2012, the employment rate for this group (including all those of working age and excluding those in regular education) was 68 per cent, compared with 75 per cent for non-migrants, and compared to between 80 and 82 per cent for EU migrants.

New research by IPPR has dug deeper into these figures to identify some of the characteristics that underpin the above variance.

To unpick some of the outcomes for particular migrant groups, our research looked at different groupings (considering gender, qualification and nationality among other things) and compared them like for like with the non-migrant population.

This revealed important differences between groups. For example, the employment rate for non-EU migrants falls short of those in the non-migrant population for all qualification levels, and the gap gets wider as the level of qualification decreases (see chart below).

But the picture is markedly different for men compared to women. Men from outside the EU have similar employment rates to those in the non-migrant population, irrespective of qualification level. Yet for women from outside the EU, the gap in employment rate with non-migrant women ranges from minus 16 percentage points for those with degrees to minus 22 percentage points for lower qualified women.

Employment gap (percentage point) between migrants from out side the EU and the non-migrant population, by qualification and gender

IPPR 2

This almost entirely accounts for the overall employment gap that we see between all non-EU migrants and non-migrants, and shows that even very educated women from outside the EU have relatively low employment rates. This is particularly the case for some nationality groups – our findings show that women from south and southeast Asian countries are less than half as likely to be in work as men, with employment rates of 43 and 87 percent respectively (although there are signs that this gap is may be starting to narrow).

The underutilisation of talent and potential in the existing migrant population reflects a failure of integration. It leaves the UK in the paradoxical position of having considerable untapped potential within the existing migrant population while the country is struggling to boost ailing productivity, including through recruitment from abroad.

In light of this, policy makers should recalibrate their focus away from a preoccupation with controlling the nature and volume of future migration flows, and towards tackling the challenges faced by people that are already here and trying to engage in the UK labour market.

Alfie Stirling is a researcher at IPPR. Follow him on Twitter

55 Responses to “The UK is failing to make the most of the skills and talents of its migrant population”

  1. Guest

    Yes, it’s a matter of people like you refusing to consider to hire them on “cultural” grounds.
    No, bigotry is not the way the world works, it’s what *you* believe and practice against people.

  2. wj

    What is it about you that makes you such a sad prat – Damon’s comment was sympathetic to incomers coming to this country; he raised points that are valid and need to be taken into account when employing people in services, that could have issues of safety, say.

    But, off you go – slagging off anyone that dares to leave a comment. Are you employed as Clickbait by LFF or are you really so bereft of a life that sneering at everyone else is your only pleasure.

  3. damon

    I think you’ll find that most Somalian women in Britain now have every right to work.

    Cultural isolation and language barriers can leave them isolated from the chances of employment though. I was on a course with one a couple of years ago and she was being encouraged to look for work as a child minder or support worker, because her only experience of any kind of work ever, had been looking after other people’s children back in her Somalian village. She was on Job Seekers Allowance and needed to be seen to be looking for work. So was applying to nurseries and the like …. but had been without success after of applying to many of the job vacancies that came up on the job centre computers.
    One problem was that this was in Belfast and she said she found it hard to understand the Belfast dialect.

  4. Guest

    No, his attack on refugees isn’t “sympathetic”. Your post, where you’re trying to exclude all foreign (and do doubt many British) people from service jobs based on “safety”, as you ask if I have your job as a troll, or your sneering attitude – nope!

    I just don’t hate the other as you do, Lord Blagger, get over it.
    I’d hire the best person, rather than your kid.

  5. Guest

    Where’s your statistics on that?

    “Cultural isolation”

    Yes, I’m sure you wouldn’t hire them. And you don’t speak to the poor, right. And you then extrapolate from a anecdote to hate on the Other.

    And there’s a jobs shortage thanks to your right wing’s austerity. Blaming that on someone being Somalian is…again, hate of the Other.

    (And Belfast now, I see – rather proves my point about how often you move, rich man)

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