The evidence is clear: the Home Secretary and the
Conservatives talk nonsense on immigration
There appears to be little
association between non-EU immigration and employment
This week the Coalition started
to fight like ferrets in a sack over their failed migration policy. Ukip is
likely to take advantage in the May European elections.
To
say the Coalition is in a terrible muddle understates the disaster they have
created for themselves as their “reducing net migration” policy has fallen
apart. Infighting and finger-pointing have now ensued. It didn’t help that the
newly published migration data showed that David Cameron’s promise to
dramatically lower net migration had disastrously failed. The much-heralded
downward trend in the early years of the Coalition has now reversed
itself.
The
latest Migration Statistics Quarterly Report, February 2014, reported a
provisional estimated net flow of 212,000 long-term migrants to the UK in the
year ending September 2013, a statistically significant increase from 154,000
in the previous year. The chart illustrates the time series pattern: during the
1960s and 1970s, there were more people emigrating from the UK than arriving to
live in the UK. During the 1980s and early 1990s, net migration was positive at
a relatively low level in the majority of years. Since 1994, it has been
positive every year and rose sharply after 1997. During the 2000s, net
migration peaked in 2004/05, in part as a result of immigration of citizens
from the Accession Countries that joined the EU in 2004. Since the peak, annual
net migration has fluctuated between around 150,000 and 250,000.
The
chart makes clear that despite falls in net migration in 2010 through 2012, the
subsequent trend is up, in large part driven by the fact that fewer UK citizens
are emigrating, presumably because Spain and other countries are less
attractive than they were pre-recession. The Coalition didn’t seem to realise
it was going to be especially hard for it to control the number of Brits
leaving, let alone the number of EU citizens arriving.
Net migration of EU
citizens doubled from 65,000 in the year ending September 2012 to 131,000 in
the year ending September 2013, which is a statistically significant increase.
Conversely, the estimate of net migration of non-EU citizens has declined over
the last few years. Although the recent fall to 141,000 in the year ending
September 2013 from 160,000 in the previous year was not a statistically
significant change, non-EU net migration remains at a lower level relative to
the 2005 and 2010 peaks.
The Coalition
recently lost their Immigration minister, Mark Harper, who was forced to stand
down after he discovered his cleaner did not have permission to work in the UK.
His replacement, James Brokenshire, last week delivered his first speech as
Immigration minister to almost universal condemnation, where he claimed that
better-off families and big businesses had benefited most from the recent
arrival of foreign workers in Britain. By contrast, he argued that “ordinary,
hard-working people” have not felt the economic benefits of immigration. Vince
Cable, in contrast, has made clear he is “intensely relaxed” about mass
immigration, which lowers the price of goods to the benefit of all. So that’s
clear, then.
Then there was all
that fuss started by Chris Cook on BBC2’s Newsnight, who discovered that a
report on the lack of displacement effects of migrants was being suppressed by
Downing Street. It apparently showed a weaker link between immigration and
unemployment than the Government had claimed. The Home Secretary, Theresa May,
claimed in 2012: “There is a clear association between non-European immigration
and employment in the UK. Between 1995 and 2010 … for every additional one
hundred immigrants, [academics] estimated that 23 British workers would not be
employed.”
The basis for this
contention was an earlier econometric study by the Government’s independent
Migration Advisory Committee (MAC), published in 2012, on the impact of
migration on the employment of native British workers. It concluded, contrary
to a number of other analyses, that there was, at least for some immigrants and
in some circumstances, a negative impact. Matt Cavanagh, then at IPPR, and Jon
Portes at NIESR were highly critical of the findings.
Lo and behold, the
previously hidden report was suddenly published a couple of days later, and boy
was it embarrassing for Dave and his Eton pals. It was written by two authors
employed at the Department of Business, Innovation and Skills and three from
the Home Office.*
The authors
conclude that there is “relatively little evidence that migration has caused
significant displacement of UK natives … when the economy is strong.” While it
does find “evidence of some labour market displacement, particularly by non-EU
migrants in recent years when the economy was in recession”, it adds this is a
short-term effect, one that is “likely to dissipate”.
They further
conclude that “there has been little evidence in the literature of a
statistically significant impact from EU migration on native employment outcomes”.
Where displacement effects are observed, the authors found these tend to be
concentrated on lower-skilled natives.
The authors of the
Government’s new study reworked the results obtained in the earlier MAC study
and found that when data from part of the period of economic downturn (2009 and
2010) were omitted, the impact of non-EU migration was no longer statistically
significant.
The finding that
displacement impacts may be heavily influenced by economic conditions the
authors claim “reconciles the MAC findings with much of the previous
literature” that prior to 2008 the bulk of the evidence pointed to little
impact of net migration on labour market outcomes for UK natives. So downturns
produce atypical results that shouldn’t be generalised from.
So UK civil
servants have confirmed that there appears to be no clear association between
non-European immigration and employment in the UK. Between 1995 and 2010, for
every additional one hundred immigrants, zero British workers would not be
employed. Theresa May was talking baloney.
* “Impacts of migration on UK
native employment: An analytical review of the evidence”, Ciaran Devlin and
Olivia Bolt (Department for Business, Innovation and Skills) and Dhiren Patel,
David Harding and Ishtiaq Hussain (Home Office).
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