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British immigration policy, work, labour market impact, Points Based System, Migration Advisory Committee, long-term migrants, employment, pay
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BRITISH IMMIGRATION POLICY AND WORK David Metcalf December 2009 Chair, Migration Advisory Committee and London School of Economics www.ukba.homeoffice.gov.uk/mac
CONTENT 1. Context immigration stock immigration flows 2. Labour market impact labour market impact of immigration how recession alters labour market impact 3. Points Based System points based system why skilled workers? 4. Migration Advisory Committee MAC tier 1: supply-side tier 2: RLMT, ICT, shortage; demand-side accession countries: method and policy 5. Discussion
Stock: share of immigrants (foreign-born) in the UK working-age population, 1979 – 2008 • 13%of working age population born outside the UK; corresponding figure for OECD is 12%, world is 3% • 68% of stock of immigrants born outside EEA • employment rate of UK born is 74% compared to 68% for non-UK born.
Flows of long-term migrants to and from the UK Balance by country of birth, Sept 2007 - Sept 2008 Flows of long-term migrants to and from the UK, 1991-2008 Note: long-term migration is defined in the survey as those intending to change their place of residence for a year or more. This definition includes all nationalities and countries of birth, including the UK. Source: International Passenger Survey, 1991-2008, published by ONS.
Flows 2008 • Inflows, outflows, net (all nationalities) • Inflow by nationality
Flows 2008 (continued) • Inflow by reason (all nationalities) NB: Work-related only 2-in-5 • NiNo’s NI numbers issued to non-UK nationals year ending March 2009 686 000 change Mar 08 – Mar 09 - 6% • Workers Registration Scheme (A8) year ending June 2009 116 000 change June 08 – June 09 -42%
Balance of non-EU nationals by reason for migration, 1991 – 2007 Note: The figures describe the balance of non-EU nationals intending to change their place of residence for a year or more. For 1995, those looking for work were not recorded separately from ‘Other reasons’. Source: International Passenger Survey 1991-2007, published by Office for National Statistics
Labour market impact of immigration • Introduction • Most adjustments focus on employment and pay (i.e. factor prices) of natives; but there are 2 other adjustment mechanisms: composition of output, e.g. ethnic restaurants, A8 gardeners production technology, e.g. labour intensive flower picking. • The studies have to deal with the no counterfactual problem they study pay change or employment change before/after immigration but really should compare such changes with what would have happened with no immigration the missing counterfactual is dealt with by identification assumptions e.g. slice LM into areas which do/do not experience immigration but immigrants choose where to go, e.g. to region with higher growth in pay then get spurious positive association: immigration causes pay growth overcome this problem using instruments OR might slice by occupation/skill/age
b.Employment and unemployment • Lump of labour fallacy: aggregate number of jobs is not fixed so there is no one-for-one displacement • e.g. consider baby boom cohorts • if number of jobs fixed, when they entered LM unemployment would rise. Did not happen. Instead • employment rose. • Unemployment • Portes and Lemos, 2004-06 A8 influx, inflow >500 000 • 409 districts (study builds on two similar previous studies) • no association between immigrant inflow and rise in claimant unemployment • this holds even for possibly vulnerable groups, such as younger workers or the lower skilled • Employment • Gilpin 2006 • 1% point increase in share of migrants in working population (approx. 300 000) would cut employment of • people of working age already in UK by 6 000. • Tiny impact. • But need also to analyse specific occupations • e.g. IT, possibly indirect displacement via intra-company transfers
c. Pay • Real wage level, average impact • Dustman (up to 2005) small positive, e.g. because of: • - immigration surplus • - immigrants paid less than MP and surplus captured by natives • IPPR (up to 2007) small negative: A8 non-complementarity? • specific occupation, e.g. impact of intra-company transfers on IT • sector pay • Wadsworth: biggest impact possibly on previous immigrants
Distribution of pay • Dustman: gains at top of distribution, losses at bottom • Nickell: clear tradeoff between immigration and pay in less skilled occupations, • e.g. care homes • Portes: A8, 2004-06, >500 000 mainly less skilled jobs – no wage effect because • less skilled protected by NMW • PBS emphasises skilled immigration. This presumably lowers skilled relative pay • cf what would otherwise have been • if supply of capital not perfectly elastic some of the immigration surplus will go to • capital, impacting on distribution between pay and profits • Wage inflationBank of England (up to 2007) • immigration reduces the NAIRU due to adjustments in labour and product markets • and fear of displacement
d. Skills • Short term – composition effect • e.g. A8 relatively well educated but substantial occupation downgrading • Longer term – complementarities and incentives • much more complicated to model and assess • e. Population • ONS projections state 4 million plus increase to 65.6 million over ten year period up to 2018 • Over two thirds of this is due to net immigration and higher fertility rates of immigrants • But ONS use 2008 net immigration figure of 180 000 • peculiar – true figure is 118 000 • so projections much too high • f. Conclusion • little impact on natives pay/jobs in short run • Plausible that LR impact good, e.g. skill complementarities, dynamic benefits, but hard to get firm • evidence
How labour market impact alters with recession • Employment and unemployment • Does immigration help to smooth the economic cycle? • - amplitude of immigrant unemployment was greater than native unemployment, but not • 2008-09 • - return migration? • - Migration Policy Institute states A8 inflow • employment motivated • no visa (can return later) • no family ties • network important – no jobs to report back • Adverse impacts: displacement • Is ‘lump of labour’ fallacy less of a fallacy? • - EU, no controls, less skilled, some displacement? • - RoW – skilled, probably less displacement (but ICTs?) • Types of labour shortage • - cyclical, e.g. civil engineers, quantity surveyors • - structural: insufficient training, e.g. some medical consultancies • - publicly funded, e.g. senior care workers, NHS pharmacists • - global excellence, e.g. ballet dancers
b. Wage pressures and levels • Migration previously reduced NAIRU due to adjustment of • product/labour market and fear of displacement (BoE). But • not so important in recession. • If capital not perfectly elastic, possible negative impact on • native pay • c. Externalities • Productivity, little change, no reason to tighten • Congestion lower, no reason to tighten • d. PBS • Automatic stabiliser rather than continued recalibration
UK policy on labour immigration Points Based System (PBS) • Tier 1 Highly skilled individuals to contribute to growth and productivity (supply-side) • Tier 2 Skilled workers with a job offer to fill gaps in the UK labour force (demand-side) • Tier 3 Low skilled workers to fill specific temporary labour shortages (suspended) • Tier 4 Students • Tier 5 Youth and temporary: people coming to UK to satisfy primarily non- economic objectives. Note: • PBS involves: (i) numbers or scale; (ii) selection or composition; (iii) rights, e.g. extensions, ILR • Re (i): Tiers 1 (highly skilled) and 2 (skilled) have no cap/quota; Tier 3 set at zero • Re (ii): focus on skilled workers • Re (iii): migrant initially admitted temporarily • Important to consider (i) inflow and (ii) duration of stay. These two factors determine stock of immigrants.
Why Skilled Workers? • What are the economic objectives of labour market immigration policy? maximise gain to natives minimise adverse distributional impact on lower paid • Greater complementarity with capital, e.g. skill-biased technical change other labour therefore larger potential ‘immigration surplus’ [efficiency] • Dynamic effect: over time productivity up raise other workers productivity (externality) innovation (spill over) • Stronger net fiscal contribution less likely to be unemployed than unskilled pay more in taxes • Larger supply of skilled/qualified workers leads to more equal pay distribution [equity]
Migration Advisory Committee (MAC) • Independent Committee: 5 economists, small secretariat • Examined Tier 1: supply side Tier 2: demand side EU: Rumania and Bulgaria, A8 registration • Method evidence based – both top-down and bottom-up strong interaction with stakeholders transparent flexible: government determines work programme • Philosophy selective immigration (e.g. via PBS) vital but only positive narrative if: no undercutting no displacement no disincentive to upskill • Not social issues, e.g. health, education, crime (MIF?)
Tier 1 • Highly Skilled, no job offer required, i.e. supply-side, human capital emphasised • October 2009 report • General (i.e. from out of country), e.g.: weighting of points: qualification, age, pay professional qualifications higher pay threshold for those with only bachelors degree salary multipliers visa 2 years + 3, instead of 3 years + 2 • Post study which colleges/subjects? why 2 years? UK graduate unemployment cross-subsidy to UK students displacement of less skilled retrospection Regarding both the above: what jobs do they do?
Tier 1 (continued) • Investors/Entrepreneurs process by which they bring in their money enforcement e.g. net cf gross job creation • Keep Tier 1 (cf EU blue card) • Numbers Sept 2008 to August 2009 Total 86 188 of which General 58% PSWR 42% Investors & entrep. <1%
Tier 2 Basics • Demand-side, employer-led, occupation-based • Skilled, job offer required, 3 year visa plus 2 year extension • Sponsor • Certificate of sponsorship (old Work Permit) • Job title skilled to NQF 3+ (i.e. NVQ 3+) • Pay to be ‘reasonable’ – is no undercutting • Prior entry clearance Routes: need 70+ points i. Mandatory competence in English (level A1) 10 pts maintenance requirement (£800) 10 pts ii. Routes shortage occupation 50 pts RLMT (35) + pay/qualifications (≥15) 50 pts ICT (30) + pay/qualifications (≥20) 50 pts
Tier 2 (continued) • July 2009 Report approx 60 000 in 2009, of which: - resident labour market test (RLMT) 30% - intra-company transfers (ICT) 60% - shortage occupation list 10% and India over 50% • Points for qualifications and pay: required under RLMT and ICT route Masters degree points raised pay thresholds raised: £17K - £24K to £20K - £32K special arrangements for e.g. teachers, nurses • RLMT retain advertise for four weeks (up from previous two weeks) investigate certification
Tier 2 (continued) • ICTs retain not route to permanent residence duration with employer up from 6 months to 12 months discount allowances • Compliance and Enforcement strengthen ex ante? Not in spirit of trust the sponsor check displacement/undercutting • Fees raise (from £170) as complement to enforcement? • Business visas –misused?
Tier 2 (continued) Shortage Occupation ListsReports Sept 08, April 09, Sept 09
Tier 2 (continued)Shortage occupation lists (Results e.g. April 2009) • Number of jobs covered by shortage occupation list: • September 2008 700 000+ • September 2009 500 000-
Tier 2 (continued) 3 hurdles, occupations/jobs where MAC lobbied • Fail on skill (NVQ 3+), e.g. chefs, except skilled sub-set care workers, except senior group • Fail on shortage community pharmacists (0/9), no evidence of closure ships officer, civil engineer, quantity surveyor: previously on social workers for adults • Fail on sensible genetic pathologists: training ceased land engineer: can get from construction ships officers: displacement plus disincentive to train UK officers future: chefs?
Accession countries: method • Policy: principle and practice (including possible actions of other EU countries) • Context: economy and immigration • Past experience: A8 experience • Theory: impact on flows, economic downturn • Restrictions: Full or partial lifting • Specific sectors: case for selective, limited, low-skilled immigration?
Policy for accession countries • What was the UK’s experience in 2004? • much larger number than predicted • lower skilled manual and elementary occupations • no negative employment impact (but impact on pay?) • will above hold under a recession? • Recommend caution: retain restrictions for now • A2: considered specific sectors (inc agriculture, food processing, social care)
Discussion • Regulating scale of immigration and selecting migrant workers - presently no limit or target - could have hard quota (say 50 000 Tier 1 or 2) or soft target (e.g. net work immigration) - could auction visas, e.g. Tier 2 certificate fee very low • PBS and other migrant worker admission policies, e.g. does the lack of cap/quota (tiers 1 and 2) imply effects of immigration largely linear rather than diminishing returns/increasing costs? • Managing low-skilled immigration, e.g. social care, agriculture, i.e. clear trade-off between raising wages or greater immigration • Is it possible to distinguish in UK system between temporary and permanent migration? e.g. sector-based schemes (SAWS) and intra-company transfers
Annex: Recent studies of impact of immigration on pay Note: All studies: LFS; immigrant is non-UK born; hourly pay; controls include age, skill, time. Points: 1. Dustman and Nickell: 5th percentile/care workers 5% point increase in immigrant share gives wage reduction of 18p hour or £7.20 for 40 hour week. 2. Reed (IPPR): note direction now negative. Authors describe it as ‘small’ but 5% point x -0.3 x £10 x 40 hours = -£6.