logo
Has mass immigration made Britain richer or poorer?

Has mass immigration made Britain richer or poorer?

Yahoo27-05-2025
No issue has dominated British politics more in living memory than immigration.
In a seismic about-turn this month, Sir Keir Starmer warned Britain risked becoming an 'island of strangers'.
Experts have long argued the economic benefits of immigration – which is currently running at more than one million new arrivals a year – are substantial.
Net positive migration, where more people arrive than leave, is generally assumed to increase a country's gross domestic product (GDP). What is less clear is whether this actually makes households any richer.
Credit: 2020 - Channel 4 News | 2025 - Reuters
Last year, following record levels of immigration to the UK, the Government tasked a group of academics with finding an answer to this question.
They concluded increased migration was associated with a rise in productivity, the key factor that determines whether individual wealth goes up or down.
Jonathan Portes, professor of economics at King's College London, said: 'In the short term, we can be reasonably sure that migration, including the current mix [Britain is receiving], is modestly positive for GDP per capita.'
This is because 'migrants overall seem to have about the same wage levels as Britons and the ones who are coming seem to be progressing well in the labour market,' he said.
The problem is average earnings for UK workers have not – in real terms, taken out of inflation – substantially increased since 2008. If Labour succeeds in obtaining higher levels of economic growth, it is expected wages would finally start to rise again.
However, argued Mr Portes, migration does not hold the key to achieving this.
He said: 'You can't solve Britain's growth problem through migration alone. It's reasonable to say it's not the main thing that determines whether we have higher or low growth.'
He added: 'The reasons for low growth over the Past 15 years are related to Brexit, austerity and the incompetence of the previous government, and migration is not going to solve any of those. It's just one of the things that makes a positive contribution.'
Mr Portes was an author of the study by the Migration Advisory Committee, an independent body that provides advice to the Government on immigration, which assessed the economic benefit of immigration between 2002 and 2018.
It found immigration had a 'positive and significant impact', and identified a 1 percentage point increase in the share of migrants coming to Britain was associated with a 0.84 point rise in productivity.
Despite the arrival of millions of migrants in Britain in recent decades, earnings have remained more or less flat since the global financial crisis.
Any added productivity immigration may have brought is put into stark context when you look at GDP per capita, which reflects economic output divided by the population.
There are concerns over what kind of migration is in the best interest of British taxpayers and whether it is a viable long-term solution for fixing the wider problems suppressing growth.
Immigration is now falling after a period of record growth. Long-term net migration is down by almost half, the Office for National Statistics (ONS) said last week.
The number of people immigrating to Britain, minus those who are leaving the country, was provisionally projected to be 431,000 in the year ending December 2024, compared with 860,000 in the year ending December 2023.
A previous forecast by the Office for Budget Responsibility in March suggested Labour is forecast to preside over a long-term surge in migrants as more choose to remain in the UK.
It came after the ONS, which has faced criticism over its data, made revisions that added an extra 15,000 migrants to estimates that net migration will settle at 340,000 a year by the end of the decade.
Nevertheless, immigration is widely expected to fall in the coming years, but fewer people than previously thought will leave the country in that time.
Net migration added a record 1.6 million people to the population in the two years to June 2024, leading to the issue once again becoming one of the biggest concerns for voters.
It set the stage for Sir Keir to promise this month to reduce immigration in a speech that came after Reform UK made significant gains on Labour in the local elections.
The Prime Minister blamed the previous Conservative government for allowing immigration to reach higher levels in an 'experiment in open borders'.
Kevin Foster, a former Conservative immigration minister under Boris Johnson, said immigration of skilled professionals was beneficial to the economy, while the movement of low-skilled workers did little to improve earnings.
'We have to avoid lumping everyone together,' he said.
He claimed the 'peak periods' of immigration under the Conservatives were when Rishi Sunak was prime minister, rather than during Boris Johnson's premiership.
Net immigration indeed peaked under Mr Sunak, at just over 900,000 in the year to June 2023 before beginning to decline, according to The Migration Observatory, a think tank.
However, it rose most rapidly during Mr Johnson's time in Number 10. Mr Foster explained this was because of an influx of refugees from Ukraine and British nationals from Hong Kong.
Asked whether he thought immigration could make households wealthier, he said: 'A lot of it depends on what route [migrants come to Britain].'
Since a new visa route was opened in 2021 following Beijing's crackdown on freedoms in Hong Kong, around 150,00 people have come to Britain from the former colony, according to figures cited by the House of Commons Library in October.
As of last summer, approximately 210,000 Ukrainian refugees had arrived in the UK under a scheme set up in the wake of Russia's invasion of the country in 2022.
Mr Foster said: 'Let's start with Hong Kong. A lot of people who have taken advantage of [the resettlement scheme] are fairly highly qualified and work in industries like finance and have a good net value added for coming into the UK.'
He said this contrasted with the prospects of some of the people coming to Britain to claim asylum. 'There have been concerns about the ability to move into employment. After arrival, those who have come [can] end up in lower-paid, more general-skilled jobs that do little to contribute to productivity.
He added: 'A group of Hong Kong financial sector workers isn't going to have the same impact on our economy as someone coming as a small boat migrant. If you have too many who are arriving through more general-skilled roles, you do have an issue there with the potential cost to the taxpayer.'
Stephen Millard, director of think tank The National Institute of Economic and Social Research, believes GDP per capita is likely to be higher now than it would have been without immigration.
'On GDP, if we are using this as a measure, it's very clear immigration raises it, if you have more people there's more output and GDP is higher. What's more important though is GDP per head.
'The immigration we have seen over the past couple of decades has raised productivity relative to what it would have been otherwise. There's always issues about how extra income is spread around the population and the distribution [but] there is certainly more output per head resulting from the immigration we have seen.'
He refutes the idea that immigration has made Britain poorer or suppressed growth. 'You can't blame immigration for the low productivity growth – it's got to be something else.'
'The two major contributors are the lack of investment in the UK, that's both public and private, compared with our peers. Business investment is lower than any other major Western economy, and that's got to have an effect on productivity,' he said.
'In 2010, we saw a period of incredibly low public investment during the austerity period. Public investment in things like infrastructure, skills, training and healthcare will lead to higher productivity. If you go through a period with low investment in those areas, it will hit productivity.'
Broaden your horizons with award-winning British journalism. Try The Telegraph free for 1 month with unlimited access to our award-winning website, exclusive app, money-saving offers and more.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Morning Bid: Tech angst on AI doubts
Morning Bid: Tech angst on AI doubts

Yahoo

time8 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Morning Bid: Tech angst on AI doubts

By Mike Dolan LONDON (Reuters) - What matters in U.S. and global markets today By Mike Dolan, Editor-At-Large, Finance and Markets In markets, the trigger for sudden confidence swoons is often elusive, particularly when looking at periodic rotations out of high-flying U.S. tech stocks. And most signs suggest this week's tech retreat may be more about re-positioning than investors receiving some lightning bolt of news. Tuesday's tech shakeout led to a 1.5% plunge in the Nasdaq index even as the blue chip Dow Jones Industrials Average hit a record intraday high. But the tech slump dragged the S&P 500 down 0.6%, and U.S. equity futures showed little sign of a bounce early on Wednesday. * Reasons for the sudden tech angst tended to be gathered after the event, with some pointing to comments late last week from OpenAI boss Sam Altman on inevitable bubbles in the sector and others pointing to different research papers fretting variously about both the limited returns on blistering AI spending to date and also its growing jobs destruction. The jitters also come ahead of next week's earnings report from chip behemoth Nvidia, some concern about the wider implications of the U.S. government's proposed stake in ailing chip giant Intel and caution ahead of the Federal Reserve's annual Jackson Hole conference this week. * Even though Fed concerns were cited across markets on Tuesday, there was little shift in Fed futures pricing during the day - and they still show just over an 80% chance of a rate cut next month. With Fed meeting minutes due later today and 20-year bonds under the hammer too, Treasury yields were flat and the dollar firmer. An unexpected pick-up in housing starts in July was reported on Tuesday but this was offset by a drop in building permits to five-year lows. * Tech-heavy stock indexes overseas were hit by Wall Street's wobble, with Japan's Nikkei losing 1.5% and South Korea's Kospi down 0.7%. Lifted on Tuesday by Ukraine deal hopes, European stocks were flatter today, with euro inflation coming in bang on forecast and a hotter-than-expected UK inflation reading downplayed due to seasonal airfare skews. Chinese stocks outperformed, with the Shanghai main index rallying to 10-year highs, as investors rotated stock holdings and hoped for more government stimulus. Be sure to check out today's column, which looks at a particular dilemma facing the Fed: should it ease to offset weakness in the housing market if that means spurring the blistering AI infrastructure boom? Today's Market Minute * U.S. and European military planners have begun exploring post-conflict security guarantees for Ukraine, U.S. officials and sources told Reuters on Tuesday, following President Donald Trump's pledge to help protect the country under any deal to end Russia's war. * Alongside a massive build-up in conventional military firepower, China has embarked on a rapid and sustained increase in the size and capability of its nuclear forces, according to the U.S. military and arms control experts. * British inflation hit its highest in 18 months in July when it increased to 3.8% from 3.6% in June, official data showed on Wednesday, once again leaving the country with the biggest price growth problem amongst the world's big rich economies. * A glaring mismatch between benchmark oil prices and expectations of a looming supply overhang has created an imbalance that could end badly for traders, writes ROI energy columnist Ron Bousso. * Trump has faced little opposition in his drive to rip up the global economic rule book. The only exception has been "the market". But now even investors are holding their fire, claims ROI markets columnist Jamie McGeever, enabling more risk to build up in the financial system. Chart of the day Americans are deeply concerned over the prospect that advances in artificial intelligence could put swaths of the country out of work permanently, according to a new Reuters/Ipsos poll. The six-day poll, which concluded on Monday, showed 71% of respondents said they were concerned that AI will be "putting too many people out of work permanently." Today's events to watch * Federal Reserve meeting minutes released (2:00 PM EDT); Board Governor Christopher Waller and Atlanta Fed President Raphael Bostic speak * U.S. corporate earnings: Target, Nordson, TJX, Lowe's, Estee Lauder, Progressive, Analog Devices * U.S. Treasury sells $16 billion of 20-year bonds Want to receive the Morning Bid in your inbox every weekday morning? Sign up for the newsletter here. You can find ROI on the Reuters website, and you can follow us on LinkedIn and X. Opinions expressed are those of the author. They do not reflect the views of Reuters News, which, under the Trust Principles, is committed to integrity, independence, and freedom from bias. (By Mike Dolan; Editing by Aidan Lewis) Melden Sie sich an, um Ihr Portfolio aufzurufen.

Bessent Says China Tariff Status Quo is Working; UK Inflation at 18-Month High
Bessent Says China Tariff Status Quo is Working; UK Inflation at 18-Month High

Bloomberg

time11 minutes ago

  • Bloomberg

Bessent Says China Tariff Status Quo is Working; UK Inflation at 18-Month High

Wall Street's selloff in tech heavyweights dragged down global markets on Wednesday, as investors cashed in gains from the leaders of the post-April rally. Europe's Stoxx 600 dropped 0.1% after closing within a whisker of an all-time high on Tuesday. Technology stocks fell as much as 0.9% before paring the loss. Investors took shelter in defensive sectors, with real estate and utility stocks among the biggest gainers. Asian stocks retreated 0.7% Elsewhere, UK inflation climbed to an 18-month high on the back of surging food, fuel and transport prices, putting the Bank of England under pressure to reconsider the pace of interest-rate cuts. Consumer prices rose 3.8% from a year earlier, up from 3.6% in June and the fastest pace since January 2024, the Office for National Statistics said Wednesday. Today's guests: Johanna Kyrklund, Schroders Group CIO, Greg Fleming, Rockefeller Capital Management CEO, Dean Forbes, Forterro CEO. (Source: Bloomberg)

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store