Eastern Eye (UK)

Foreign workers numbers rise

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BRITAIN recorded its biggest rise in foreign workers since the start of the Covid-19 pandemic in the year to June, driven overwhelmi­ngly by workers from outside the European Union, official figures showed on Tuesday (16).

Since January 2021, most EU citizens not already working in Britain must be sponsored by an employer and be paid a salary that does not significan­tly undercut existing wages, after losing their previous almost-unrestrict­ed right to work.

The post-Brexit change puts EU migrants on the same footing as those from the rest of the world, but has drawn complaints from employers who find the process bureaucrat­ic, and a non-starter for most jobs that pay under £25,600 a year.

Tuesday’s Office for National Statistics data showed the number of foreign-born workers in Britain rose by 223,000 in the year to the end of June, up from an increase of 184,000 in the year to March and the biggest rise since early 2020.

“Migration, a key source of worker shortages through the pandemic, is showing some signs of bouncing back,” said James Smith, who is an economist at ING.

The data may be welcomed by the Bank of England which is worried that a shortage of candidates to fill jobs could push up wages too quickly and aggravate the recent jump in inflation in the UK.

The latest figures confirm a big shift in migration patterns compared with before Brexit.

Non-EU workers increased by 189,000 while the number of EU workers rose by 34,000 over the past year.

Previous government data showed India, Nigeria and the Philippine­s were the countries whose nationals received the most skilled work visas in the year to March.

By contrast, more than a million EU workers moved to Britain between the 2008-09 financial crisis and June 2016’s Brexit referendum, since when the number of EUborn workers in employment has broadly stabilised at slightly under 2.4 million.

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