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Immigration in the UK: Numbers, Impacts and Policy Debates Martin Ruhs University of Oxford martin.ruhs@conted.ox.ac.uk
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This talk UK Immigration policies since early 2000s: opening and closing Numbers: what difference did EU enlargement make? Impacts of EU migration: what do we know? Policy debates 1: – how to reduce growing reliance on migrant workers, especially in lower-skilled occupations? – how to regulate highly skilled migration and students?
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Opening and closing doors “Managed Migration” Policies before EU enlargement: The economic benefits of immigration EU enlargement 2004: No restrictions on EU8 workers EU enlargement 2007: Restrictions on EU2 workers Since 2008: Points-based System for non-EU immigration Since 2010: Net-migration target and cap on skilled non-EU workers (plus more restrictions on family and student immigration from outside EU) Big current policy question: what to do about EU immigration?
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Migration to and from the UK
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Top ten sending countries (by COB)
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A8 and A2 migrants in the UK
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EU8 Migration flows much larger than predicted (but still less than a fifth of all inflows)
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EU8 nationals have among the highest employment rates in the UK
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EU8 nationals are, on average, better educated than UK-born workers, but most EU8 are in LS jobs
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EU8 migrants are among the lowest earners in UK
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EU2 Immigration
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Impacts of A8 immigration
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Impacts of EU8 immigration Labour markets – Econometric studies find no evidence of significant adverse effects on wages or employment; but qualitative research with employers finds preference for migrants in some sectors; sectoral/occupational effects? Fiscal effects – Only one study: finds pos. effects during 2004- 09: low wages outweighed by high employment rates
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Impacts of EU8 immigration Public services (provision and consumption) – Significant data limitations – Research (NIESR 2011) finds that, in 2009-10, the per capita consumption of education, health and social care services of recent migrants was lower than that of the UK-born population – Many anecdotes and public debates about some public services (incl schools and hospitals) not coping with pace of change; funding issues – EU8 less likely to be in social housing than UK- born; but debates about allocation of limited social housing
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Impacts of EU8 immigration So overall: – data limitations and gaps in evidence – Employers and migrants clearly benefited – Fiscal effects likely positive (and small) but “pace of change” issues – Debates and evidence gaps about impacts on specific low-waged labour markets
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Policy debates
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Policy debates 1: EU immigration EU8 “problem” for public opinion: Low-skilled; “out of control” EU8 major political problem for Labour Party; Labour Leader says that it was “wrong” to open up to A8 Key policy challenge: how to reduce reliance on migrants, esp. in low-skilled jobs EU8 immigration Immigration and public policy; system effects – Supply side approach (Conservatives) – Demand side approach (Labour) Access to benefits A2 migration
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Policy debates 2: students and skilled immigration from outside EU Students biggest category in immigration statistics; gvt has restricted student migration but not universities; future trajectories? Length of stay? Impacts? Highly skilled workers: impacts? how to attract and select? Investors and entrepreneurs always tension between “protecting” and “globalising” national labour markets; effectiveness of resident labour market test?
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Immigration in the UK: Numbers, Impacts and Policy Debates Martin Ruhs University of Oxford martin.ruhs@conted.ox.ac.uk
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Appendix
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