13 December, 2013
Summary
1. Large scale immigration by low paid workers from the EU reduces the wages of low skilled British workers, adds nothing to GDP per head but adds considerably to pressure on public services. In-work benefits are a huge incentive and must be reformed. Recommendations are at paragraph 14.
Introduction
2. Migration Watch UK believes that significant inward flows of people can detrimentally affect the chances of the native born in the labour market. In particular large flows from Eastern Europe, where wages are far lower and for whom there are no employment restrictions, are particularly detrimental to those native born workers who possess lower skills levels and especially younger workers in London. Moreover, the system of social security in the UK and the effective tax rates for the low paid distort the labour market by disincentivising work for the native born. This evidence note is confined to a discussion of low skilled migrant labour from East Europe since there has not been a direct route for non-EU workers to come to fill low skilled routes for many years.
3. We welcome the opportunity that the MAC has provided for people to submit evidence with respect to “‘real-life’ perspectives”[1] that they may have experienced themselves or observed in their local area. This type of anecdotal evidence has for too long been disregarded by desk-based economists who have ignored what cannot be input into a spreadsheet but which has a significant impact on people’s lives.
Migrant Labour in Low-Skilled Sectors – Why do Migrants take Low Skilled Work?
4. Migration can largely be explained by two factors: employment opportunities and the wage differentials between two countries. The lower the wage relative to other countries, the greater the incentive for migration. The wage differential between East Europe and the UK largely explains the significant flow of migration from these countries following the accession of the A8 countries in 2004.
5. The wage differential continues to exist almost ten years on from accession and exists even for those who come to work in low skilled sectors where wages are topped up by in-work benefits; these can be substantial for those with a family. Migration Watch UK research has found that a family of four with a single earner working at the minimum wage would be almost four times better off in the UK than in Poland, taking account for the cost of living.[2] A Romanian and Bulgarian[3] family would be eight and nine times better off, respectively.[4] The consequence of this significant pull factor is that 20 percent of people in low skilled jobs were born abroad.[5]
Benefits of Migrant Labour for Employers
6. Business is often reluctant to admit that it is in favour of higher levels of immigration primarily because it reduces wages at the lower end and thus their costs. Businesses and employment agencies have been found to be actively recruiting overseas.
7. A number of studies have found that there has been no impact on average wages but that they have fallen at the lower end of the labour market.[6] Large flows may also have a negative impact on workers’ conditions as an employee could be less likely to report poor working conditions for fear that their employer will replace him with a migrant worker.
8. Migrant workers can be more motivated than native born workers since their incentives to take low paid work is much greater. A migrant worker from Europe has travelled across a continent in order to find work which will increase his living standard considerably. This is in contrast to a native born worker who has a weaker incentive to work due to an unreformed benefits system which imposes significant effective rates of tax on those who move from benefits to work. As low paid workers take on more hours and earn more money benefits are withdrawn such that tax rates can be as high as 95%.[7]
Impact of Migrant Labour
9. The economic benefit of migration largely accrues to the migrant themselves through their wages. Beyond that however there exists little economic benefit from low skilled and low paid migrant workers since they generally add to GDP at the same rate as they add to population, thus failing to increase GDP per head of the population. The National Institute for Economic and Social Research found that the medium-term impact of A8 migration to the UK on GDP per capita was likely to be ‘negligible’.[8]
10. Although many studies have failed to find conclusive evidence of a link between EU migration and displacement of local workers in the labour market as a whole, this does not mean that there is no link between high levels of migration from Europe and youth unemployment in certain parts of the country, notably in London where one in four economically active young people are out of work. Meanwhile London sucks in East European migrants in order to fill low skilled and low paid roles. The IPPR noted in 2012 that:
“Employers have also become increasingly reluctant to hire teenagers, particularly in London. Only 6 per cent of UK employers, and just 3 per cent of employers in the capital, recruit straight from school. As a result, school-leavers compete with more experienced workers for the same jobs, in addition to competing with more highly qualified young people. Despite the vibrancy of London’s economy, the inward flow of migration from other regions and abroad has resulted in a highly competitive environment at the lower end of the labour market. Many of these relatively well-skilled new residents take on low paid jobs while they finish their studies or look for something better, leaving those with the weakest skills and experience more likely to be ‘squeezed out’.”[9]
11. The impacts of unemployment on the individual, the family unit and on the wider community are significant and negative. There is also an impact on the taxpayer since taxes are spent on supporting those displaced from work as a result of immigration.
12. There are wider impacts on society as a result of a significant flow of migrants to the UK, including on the provision of housing, healthcare and education:
13. Families in which the workers earn the minimum wage in low skilled work do not make sufficient tax contributions to cover the costs of the additional services that they consume so they are a net cost to the taxpayer.
Recommendations
14. Migration from East Europe cannot be restricted under the current EU framework. Similarly, the benefit system must be applied equally to all EU citizens. However, all of the major political parties believe that the EU, as it currently functions, needs changing. Within this context of reform the government should consider the following: