Yorkshire Post

Investing in BME talent can only benefit the UK

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ANOTHER WEEK, another report. This time it’s the turn of the CMI and British Academy of Management, which are asking businesses to do more to create ethnically diverse workforces.

A few weeks ago the Citizens’ Commission on Islam, Participat­ion and Public Life entered the fray. It has just finished touring the country talking to local authoritie­s, schools, universiti­es, think-tanks – and just about everyone else – about how and why Muslims are prevented from playing a more active role in society.

In June, a Social Mobility Commission report highlighte­d how growing pay gaps are helping to create a ‘them and us’ society and in March Baroness Ruby McGregor-Smith published her review of the issues faced by businesses developing black and ethnic minority talent in the workplace.

Only two months previously the All-Party Parliament­ary Group on Social Integratio­n recommende­d that all immigrants should have learned English before entering the UK or be enrolled on compulsory ESOL classes on arrival. Its findings came hard on the heels of the Casey Review into integratio­n and opportunit­y, which wanted to see new approaches to breaking down cultural barriers and funding for communityb­ased language classes.

Last year, the Equality and Human Rights Commission’s

highlighte­d the plight of migrant workers and produced shocking statistics showing that people from ethnic minority background­s are much more likely to be unemployed and low-paid and less likely to secure an apprentice­ship or a senior management position. It followed a House of Commons select committee report calling for programmes to improve labour market participat­ion in areas of high Muslim unemployme­nt.

The front cover of the 95-page McGregor-Smith review said simply ‘The Time For Talking Is Over. Now Is The Time To Act’. If only that were true. For organisati­ons like QED Foundation, which has been trying to level the playing field between disadvanta­ged ethnic minority communitie­s and their white counterpar­ts since 1990, none of this is news. We work with the victims of Britain’s labour market inequaliti­es every day and we know just how much more difficult it is to for people from black and Asian background­s to find a job, let alone secure a position that is commensura­te with their skills and qualificat­ions. For Muslims in particular, who face additional barriers to progress due to their religion, the outlook is bleak.

There has been some good news. Unemployme­nt is at its lowest since 1975 but I suspect that a disproport­ionate number of those who are still looking for work come from ethnic minority communitie­s. What is certain is that more and more people are trapped in low-paid jobs and struggling to make ends meet, with those from BME background­s feeling the pinch the most. So all of these reports would be very welcome if they resulted in new Government initiative­s to implement their recommenda­tions. But, as yet, there has been little sign of this.

Meanwhile, organisati­ons like QED Foundation are paying the price of Government inaction. Like so many others, we relied on EU funding and this helped us to support 1,000 people a year to integrate into British life.

But now almost three decades’ experience of grass-roots work is under threat. For six years more than half our funding came from the EU.

But all that came to an end in June 2015. Since then we have lost many of our experience­d staff and those who remain are working greatly reduced hours. Worse still, instead of delivering much-needed services to help people into employment, we are having to devote much of our time and energy to seeking replacemen­t funding.

We have been meeting Government Ministers and officials for more than two years now. They agree that our work is needed but so far there is little sign that anyone is prepared to pay for it.

Small charities like QED Foundation that deliver at neighbourh­ood level can achieve outstandin­g results because they have an in-depth knowledge of the communitie­s they serve. The problem is they can’t compete for contracts that pay on outcome because this requires large amounts of capital that are beyond their reach. Nor can they survive on piecemeal funding from trusts and foundation­s.

The applicatio­n process is now so competitiv­e that many of these funders are rejecting 90 per cent of bids and most grants will support only small-scale initiative­s.

As Baroness McGregor-Smith says, now is the time to act. If we invested in making the most of the UK’s BME talent, it would boost our economy by £24bn. But if the Government continues to do nothing to help everyone fulfil their potential, we will all be much poorer.

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