A selection of recent media reports

The new recession lifestyle trend: quit Scotland for good
On one side of the hall, a dozen families jostle to be the next in line to inquire about a Canadian visa, while a more p...
Herald Scotland (14-Mar-2010)
Sarkozy faces heavy loss in French regional poll
French President Nicolas Sarkozy faces a regional vote on Sunday that opinion polls suggest will result in a heavy loss ...
Yahoo Uk And Ireland News (14-Mar-2010)
MAIL ON SUNDAY COMMENT: Discrimination - An even-handed response at last
This country accepted laws against discrimination because they rightly put a stop to crude, cruel and unjust behaviour b...
The Mail On Sunday (13-Mar-2010)
Illegal immigrants should be allowed to stay
Lots of people seem to have been touched by the story of 31-year-old Sukhwinder Singh, who was stabbed to death in East ...
Timesonline (13-Mar-2010)
BNP 'amends' rules after decision
The British National Party began processing applications within hours of a court order banning recruitment of new member...
The Oxford Times (13-Mar-2010)
Free Churches question whether BNP should be allowed to stand in elections
The Baptist Union of Great Britain, the United Reformed Church and the Methodist Church in Britain have questioned wheth...
Ekklesia (13-Mar-2010)
The only politician with the guts to speak out about immigration: Frank Field reveals his candid opinion on the future o..
British cities are like a tinderbox awaiting a spark, warns Frank Field Surprisingly, it's not just ambitious Tory MPs ...
The Mail On Sunday (13-Mar-2010)
Griffin vs Hodge: the Battle for Barking
A former Labour stronghold has become home to one of the ugliest fights in politics. In one corner, a long-standing mini...
Guardian.co.uk (13-Mar-2010)
ASYLUM SEEKERS GET HOMES WHILE BRITONS HAVE TO WAIT
A MASSIVE £750million of tax-payers cash has been spent by the Government on housing asylum seekers in the last three y...
Daily Star (12-Mar-2010)
Court bans BNP from recruiting new members
The British National Party was today banned from recruiting new members after a court ruled its constitution was illegal...
The Independent (12-Mar-2010)
LABOUR IS ADDING INSULT TO INJURY FOR WORKING CLASSES
WITH nearly two million British citizens stuck on waiting lists for social housing nobody can deny that there is a despe...
Daily Express (12-Mar-2010)
REFUGEE ASSAULT CLAIMS 'NOT PROBED'
Asylum seekers who claimed they were assaulted by security staff hired by the Home Office did not have their complaints ...
Daily Star (12-Mar-2010)
£750M COST OF HOUSING ASYLUM SEEKERS...WHILE 1.8M BRITONS LANGUISH ON WAITING LISTS
MORE than £750million of tax­payers money has been spent on ­providing homes for asylum seekers over the past four years...
Daily Express (12-Mar-2010)
Public sector pension costs may reach £79bn a year
Pension payments to retired public servants could balloon by 200 per cent to £79bn a year in the next 50 years, accordin...
The Independent (12-Mar-2010)
URGENT 'REVIEWS' AT OLD PEOPLE'S HOME
Southwark Council has instructed social workers to make urgent reviews of people it has placed at the old folks' home wh...
Southwark News (11-Mar-2010)
Leicestershire police hunt for lorry stowaways
Organised criminal gangs which force illegal migrants to work in poor conditions for a few pounds a day could be operati...
This is Leicestershire (11-Mar-2010)
America nears 'tipping point' where babies born to minority parents outnumber whites for first time
America is reaching a tipping point when the babies born to minority parents outnumber whites for the first time. More ...
Daily Mail (11-Mar-2010)
Frosty Welcome For UK Electronic Borders Plan
Government claims over the roll-out of its new electronic border controls are 'not credible', according to opposition pa...
97.4rockfm (11-Mar-2010)
ILLEGAL IMMIGRANT LANDED A JOB IN LORDS
AN illegal immigrant worked in the Houses of Parliament for six months without any security checks, a court was told...
Daily Express (11-Mar-2010)
Gold Service traffickers exposed by The Sun
TODAY The Sun exposes a gang that offers illegal immigrants door-to-door delivery into Britain in a scam which they call...
Online Sun (10-Mar-2010)

Economic 1.19

MigrationWatch Commentary - ITEM Club Special Report: Migration and the UK economy

Ernst & Young published on 18 December a special report on migration and the UK economy.

The press release [1], entitled Foreign workers have allowed 3% growth without inflation, was relentlessly positive but there were some important points in the report itself that were not highlighted in the release:

a) Immigration numbers
The report confused various terms, claiming that A8 immigrants accounted for 37% of arrivals in 2006. In fact they were 15.6% of the total inflow and 18% of the non British inflow. They were 22% of net foreign immigration.

b) GDP per head
The report admitted that the lower wage rates of the most recent immigrants implied that the rise in GDP per head (rather than GDP) might be small or even negative.

c) Outlook for growth
The report stated (page 5) that, over the period 2007 -16, "immigration at current levels, should it continue, would add about 0.3% per annum to trend growth". The report did not mention that immigration at current levels will add approximately 0.4% annually to population. The impact on GDP per head would therefore again be somewhat negative.

d) Impact on youth
The report recognised (page 9) that there had been a surprising rise of around 100,000 in unemployment in the 18-24 age group (excluding those in full time education) since early 2004. This accounted for about half the overall rise in unemployment over the period. The report thought it possible that "native" youngsters may have been losing out in the battle for entry level jobs. Rigidities arising from the minimum wage might have been another factor. The press statement quoted the Chairman of Ernst & Young as saying that "business has to do something to address the fact that the UK has one of the lowest levels of youth employment among all the major OECD countries and re-engage with a lost generation who have slipped through the net.

e) Productivity
The report notes that total factor productivity growth (that part of actual growth not explained by the growth of labour and capital inputs) between 2002 and 2006 totalled 0.8% - below the 1.2% seen in the 1995 -2000 upswing and also below the long term average (since 1973) of 1%. This is a significant result.

f) The alternative
The report notes that we do not know what would have happened to domestic labour supply in the absence of increased immigration. "It might have proved surprisingly elastic via increased participation rates in marginal groups". This, as the report acknowledges, was the case in the late 1980s.

Conclusion
The press release states clearly the view of the Item Club:

ITEM believes it is important that current and future governments continue to keep an open mind and open doors to economic migrants. The UK economy needs the current rate of growth of immigration to be sustained particularly as our UK-born working pool is growing more slowly than the pensioner population.

Unfortunately, much in this report is evidence in the opposite direction. As for the implication that immigration can help with pensions, The House of Lords Economic Affairs Committee dismissed this argument in November 2003. They reported:

We conclude that it is neither appropriate nor feasible to attempt to counter the trend towards a more aged society in the UK through a manipulation of immigration policy.

1 January, 2008