New jobs - who gets them ?
Facts | 24.07.2009 10:40 | Migration
“British jobs for foreign workers”
New figures published today show just how few new jobs in Britain have gone to British born workers. Looking at people of working age, all jobs created in the private sector under the Labour Government have been filled by foreign born workers. The number of UK born workers in the private sector actually fell by nearly 90,000 between the first quarter of 1997 and the first quarter of 2009. A third of new public sector jobs also went to non-UK born workers.
In respect of the total working population over the age of 16, the picture is slightly different – because a significant number of UK born people have stayed on after the official retirement age. These figures show that 1.1 million new jobs have been created in the public sector of which 28% went to non-UK born workers. In the private sector there were 1.8 million new jobs – but 85% went to non-UK born workers.
Commenting on the figures, the co-Chairmen of the Cross-Party Group on Balanced Migration, Frank Field MP and Nicholas Soames MP, said:
“These figures tell a simple story: in the private sector it has been British jobs for foreign workers. The private sector should now match the public sector in ensuring local people have the first chance at gaining local jobs”.
A briefing note on the figures is attached.
Note to editors:
1. For media enquiries, please contact Patrick White on 020 7219 6636.
2. The Rt Hon Frank Field MP and The Hon Nicholas Soames MP are Co-Chairmen of the Cross Party Group on Balanced Migration. The Group’s Vice-Chairmen are Lord (Bill) Jordan CBE (former President of the Amalgamated Engineering and Electrical Union) and Daniel Kawczynski MP (Conservative, Shrewsbury &
Atcham). Other members include Tobias Ellwood MP, Roger Godsiff MP, Peter Kilfoyle MP, David Taylor MP, Robert Key MP, Lord Ahmed, Lord Anderson, Lord Carey (former Archbishop of Canterbury) Baroness Cox, Field Marshal Lord Inge KG, GCB, PC, DL, Lord Skidelsky and Lord Wakeham.
3. For more information, please visit www.balancedmigration.com
Research Note
NEARLY ALL NEW JOBS HAVE GONE TO
FOREIGN-BORN WORKERS
1. Figures obtained recently from the Office for National Statistics [under the Freedom of Information Act] reveal that nearly all the new jobs created in the private sector since the first quarter of 1997 have gone to non-UK born workers.
2. The situation is particularly stark for those of working age. The increase in employment between the first quarter of 1997 and the first quarter of 2009 was about 2.3 million. Of these 930,000 were in the public sector and 1,470,000 were in the private sector. In the public sector about 1/3rd of the extra jobs went to non-UK born workers whereas in the private sector all the extra jobs went to foreign-born workers - indeed UK born individuals in employment actually fell by nearly 90,000.
3. The picture looks slightly different in respect of all working people over the age of 16 because a significant number of UK born people have stayed on after the official retirement age. These figures show that 1.1 million new jobs have been created in the public sector of which 28% went to non-UK born workers. In the private sector there were 1.8 million new jobs but 85% went to non-UK born workers.
4. These official figures are estimates based on survey respondents’ views about the organisation for which they work. They also exclude a relatively small number for whom the country of birth was not known.
5. The graph below shows how the number of non-UK born workers has steadily increased in the working age workforce while the number of UK born workers has declined. The recession has, of course, hit both series.
6. The bar chart below shows the effect on those of working age over the whole period.
23
New figures published today show just how few new jobs in Britain have gone to British born workers. Looking at people of working age, all jobs created in the private sector under the Labour Government have been filled by foreign born workers. The number of UK born workers in the private sector actually fell by nearly 90,000 between the first quarter of 1997 and the first quarter of 2009. A third of new public sector jobs also went to non-UK born workers.
In respect of the total working population over the age of 16, the picture is slightly different – because a significant number of UK born people have stayed on after the official retirement age. These figures show that 1.1 million new jobs have been created in the public sector of which 28% went to non-UK born workers. In the private sector there were 1.8 million new jobs – but 85% went to non-UK born workers.
Commenting on the figures, the co-Chairmen of the Cross-Party Group on Balanced Migration, Frank Field MP and Nicholas Soames MP, said:
“These figures tell a simple story: in the private sector it has been British jobs for foreign workers. The private sector should now match the public sector in ensuring local people have the first chance at gaining local jobs”.
A briefing note on the figures is attached.
Note to editors:
1. For media enquiries, please contact Patrick White on 020 7219 6636.
2. The Rt Hon Frank Field MP and The Hon Nicholas Soames MP are Co-Chairmen of the Cross Party Group on Balanced Migration. The Group’s Vice-Chairmen are Lord (Bill) Jordan CBE (former President of the Amalgamated Engineering and Electrical Union) and Daniel Kawczynski MP (Conservative, Shrewsbury &
Atcham). Other members include Tobias Ellwood MP, Roger Godsiff MP, Peter Kilfoyle MP, David Taylor MP, Robert Key MP, Lord Ahmed, Lord Anderson, Lord Carey (former Archbishop of Canterbury) Baroness Cox, Field Marshal Lord Inge KG, GCB, PC, DL, Lord Skidelsky and Lord Wakeham.
3. For more information, please visit www.balancedmigration.com
Research Note
NEARLY ALL NEW JOBS HAVE GONE TO
FOREIGN-BORN WORKERS
1. Figures obtained recently from the Office for National Statistics [under the Freedom of Information Act] reveal that nearly all the new jobs created in the private sector since the first quarter of 1997 have gone to non-UK born workers.
2. The situation is particularly stark for those of working age. The increase in employment between the first quarter of 1997 and the first quarter of 2009 was about 2.3 million. Of these 930,000 were in the public sector and 1,470,000 were in the private sector. In the public sector about 1/3rd of the extra jobs went to non-UK born workers whereas in the private sector all the extra jobs went to foreign-born workers - indeed UK born individuals in employment actually fell by nearly 90,000.
3. The picture looks slightly different in respect of all working people over the age of 16 because a significant number of UK born people have stayed on after the official retirement age. These figures show that 1.1 million new jobs have been created in the public sector of which 28% went to non-UK born workers. In the private sector there were 1.8 million new jobs but 85% went to non-UK born workers.
4. These official figures are estimates based on survey respondents’ views about the organisation for which they work. They also exclude a relatively small number for whom the country of birth was not known.
5. The graph below shows how the number of non-UK born workers has steadily increased in the working age workforce while the number of UK born workers has declined. The recession has, of course, hit both series.
6. The bar chart below shows the effect on those of working age over the whole period.
23
Facts
Comments
Hide the following 7 comments
Durrutti02 and the avalanche
24.07.2009 11:45
Capitalism isn't supposed to be nice
@ "Capitalism isn't supposed to be nice "
24.07.2009 12:21
'That's the problem with facts they are dammed hard to argue against.'
Richard Nixon
George
Facts
24.07.2009 13:02
2) Only China and India have more nationals living abroad, so the UK has the highest percentage living abroad of any country.
3) 5.5 million British nationals live overseas permanently (equivalent to 9.2 per cent of the UK’s population). In addition, an estimated 500,000 British people live abroad for part of the year.
4) When those claiming British ancestry are added, the figure climbs to around 58 million.
5) If current trends continue, we could expect as many as a million more British nationals to emigrate over the next five years.
Danny
Homepage: http://www.ippr.org/members/download.asp?f=/ecomm/files/BA_exec_summ.pdf&a=skip
Yawn! The dawn of the reactionaries is here
24.07.2009 13:05
What would be the point of posting up crappy cut and pastes to Indymedia from mainstream papers about immigration and opinion polls etc to a site that devoted to, let's call it, a liberal-left and beyond perspective. It's not as if these posts are going to make most I/M readers suddenly become xenophobic assholes like the posters.
Have these people got more time on their hands than sense? I suspect so. They can't even act like trolls who are just out to get a kneejerk response but instead they post in earnestness what they think we will all fall over ourselves with and declare our stupidity about how we actually hadn't thought these things through. How silly of us!
Do they expect that our political experiences in trying to make the world less divided and fairer for everyone can suddenly be dissolved in a puff of smoke because, blimey, some people are now in the U.K who weren't born here?
Sadly these anti-immigration creeps who go on about british workers losing out to foriegn workers (as is implicit in these recent posts) are too dumb to realise that it wouldn't make any difference to the fairness of work in the UK if all jobs were done by all white people. It wouldn't make Tesco's pay more. It wouldn't make farmworkers wages go up. It wouldn't even make public sectors workers wages go up. If that's the case, then who's interest is best served by anti-immigration politics?
I have to time for polite dialogue with reactionaries! Fuck off back to licking the bosses arse.
R
@ George
24.07.2009 13:22
Checked the website for the actual figures and, not suprisingly, it reveals "these officical figures are estimates based on survey respondents views about the organisation for which they work"
It's bullshit dressed as bullshit, no political context, more at home in the gluey pages of the mail/telegraph/express than on indymedia.
The press release with it's neu-bnp comedy headline is doing capitalism's job for it - setting working class people against themselves; so we get immigrant vs indigenous rather than working class vs ruling class (and their hand-wringing reactionary wet faced liberal apologists).
Capitalism isn't supposed to be nice
They Are Not Facts
24.07.2009 13:43
I trust Nicolas Soames with my life and my statistics dot com
@Danny
24.07.2009 14:21
erm... think about that for a while. one doesn't need to know anything about the actual facts and figures to figure out that this sentence is bollocks - but someone who does may point out that, for instance, over 50% of the population of Cape Verde lives overseas ( http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cape_Verdean_diaspora); and according to Wikipedia ( http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Philippines), 11 million filipinos, out of a population of 92million, live overseas.
i just picked two countries at random that i was aware had a large emigre population, which contradict both parts of your sentence.
i think this durutti's postings are a load of shite, but it really does harm our cause to spout bollocks in response....
s