Migration has altered the size and shape of the UK labour market
in recent decades, but the move to a more restrictive regime
since leaving the European Union won’t drive the ‘high wage‘
economy that the Prime Minister has claimed it will, according to
new Resolution Foundation research published today (Thursday).
Under new management – the 15th report for The Economy
2030 Inquiry, a collaboration with the LSE, funded by the
Nuffield Foundation – examines how the UK’s migration regime has
affected the labour force in the past, and what the new regime,
which restricts work-related immigration to those with
higher-wage jobs, will mean for Britain’s workforce.
The expectation that restricting freedom of movement will drive
change in the labour market is well-founded, says the author, as
immigration has significantly altered the size and composition of
the UK labour force over the past two decades.
Between 1994 and 2019, the UK labour force grew by 18 per cent
(4.9 million), with migrants comprising over three-quarters (77
per cent) of this growth, and EU workers alone accounting for
over a third (34 per cent) of total labour force growth.
Over this period, EU migrants have become increasingly
over-represented in lower-paid occupations – in part reflecting
the accession of eight eastern European countries to the EU in
2004.
In 2000 both EU and non-EU migrants were more likely than UK-born
workers to work in high-skilled managerial and professional roles
(by 6 and 8 percentage points respectively). By 2019 however, EU
workers were significantly more likely than UK-born workers to
work in low-paid jobs such as plant operatives (6 percentage
points) or elementary roles (9 percentage points).
The report notes that the new migration regime will mean
significant change for some lower-paying industries which rely on
migrant labour and typically see high staff turnover – such
as food manufacturing, warehousing and accommodation – with
many of their roles excluded from the new ‘skilled worker visa’
(SWV).
For example, one-in-five workers (20 per cent) in food
manufacturing in 2017-19 were from the EU and would be ineligible
for a SWV, meaning the sector is likely to need to change
significantly or shrink in the years ahead. The food and
accommodation sectors who rely on EU-workers in SWV-ineligible
roles for 10 per cent of their workforce have seen vacancies
double as the economy reopened.
But despite past evidence showing that migration has a positive
impact on firm-level productivity, the report argues that the
impact of the new migration regime on the economy as a whole is
likely to be small.
The Prime Minister’s claims that controlled migration is the key
to a new high wage economic strategy are overdone. While the
shrinking of low-productivity, migrant-reliant sectors like
farming and food manufacturing could boost average productivity,
the new regime is unlikely to have a big impact on the UK’s
economy-wide productivity problem, as there is no strong
relationship between changes in the share of workers that are
migrants across countries and productivity growth.
Lower migration will also not deliver a big hit to the public
finances that opponents of lower migration often warn of.
Although the Office for Budget Responsibility find that the new
migration regime could result in £2 billion savings to the public
finances by 2024-25, this figure is small in comparison to other
expenditures, like the £8.7 billion on Covid-19 related personal
protective equipment (PPE) that the Department for Health and
Social Care recently reported writing off.
Kathleen Henehan, Senior Research and Policy Analyst at
the Resolution Foundation, said:
“Despite claims from both sides of the debate, the UK’s new
migration regime will do little to change the UK’s economic
trajectory, or its central low investment, low productivity
challenges.
“Over the past two decades, immigration has had a profound effect
on the size and composition of the UK’s labour force, with
migrants driving over three-quarters of the growth in the
workforce.
“And sectors which are particularly reliant on migrant workers –
such as food manufacturing, warehousing and accommodation – are
more exposed to the regime changes, which will limit firms’
abilities to hire low-paid non-UK workers in these industries and
to respond quickly to changes in demand.
“But evidence does not suggest that the coming change in the
level and nature of migration will transform our economy, or our
public finances.”
“Ultimately, a migration strategy is not a substitute for an
economic strategy.”