The Impact of Immigration on the Labour Market
Submitting Institution
Royal Holloway, University of LondonUnit of Assessment
Economics and EconometricsSummary Impact Type
PoliticalResearch Subject Area(s)
Economics: Applied Economics
Commerce, Management, Tourism and Services: Business and Management
Studies In Human Society: Demography
Summary of the impact
A new methodology has been developed that enables a more flexible
approach to understanding the effects of immigration on the labour market
and the native-born labour force. The key finding is that the effect of
immigration on wages and employment depends on the extent of the
substitutability between immigrant and native born labour. This
substitutability differs at different skill levels, so that immigration
has a greater effect on unskilled native born workers. This new
methodology's findings have informed the debate over labour market effects
and have influenced the development of related policies by Government and
other key stakeholders.
The evidence produced by Professor Wadsworth's research directly has
shaped or influenced policy made by government. In particular, the
research has been used as input into several key policy recommendations
made by the Home Office sponsored Migration Advisory Committee (MAC) (of
which Wadsworth is a member) to inform the coalition government's declared
aim of achieving a reduction in the levels of net migration in the current
parliament to the tens of thousands. The research has been cited by
numerous stakeholders in the debate on the impact of rising immigration on
the labour market. There are numerous examples of citations in a public
discussion, consultation document or judgement.
Underpinning research
Wadsworth has been at Royal Holloway since 1996. We focus on Wadsworth's
academic publication Manacorda, Manning and Wadsworth (2012) (publication
1). The first version of this publication was produced as a discussion
paper in 2006 (publication 2) with the research evolving and carrying on
in the following years until the publication of the final article.
By the mid-2000s, 12% of the working age population had been born
overseas, up from the 7.5% share observed at the end of the last recession
in 1993. The rising level of immigration has stimulated renewed interest
among policy makers and academic researchers concerned with the effects of
immigration, with the impact of immigration on labour market outcomes
being a particularly controversial issue. The research (publications 1
& 2) addressed a key puzzle in the analysis of the UK Labour market,
which was that despite the large increase in immigration into the UK in
recent decades, which generated an increase in the labour supply and so
potentially more competition for jobs, the data seemed to show only a
small effect of immigration on the wages of the native labour force.
The research proposed a new methodology: a skill-cell correlation
approach, which allowed for the possibility of imperfect substitution
between native born labour and foreign born labour, so that,
theoretically, migrants could increase as well as decrease the wage rate
of native born workers and have differential effects on native born
workers dependent on their skill levels.
This was a much more flexible approach than had been used hitherto and
was able to provide new insights into the empirical analysis of the
effects of immigration on the labour market. The research was able to
decompose the average wage effects of immigration into differing effects
across different skill levels, and showed how immigration can affect the
wage structure even when the average wage does not change a great deal.
The key findings of the research are that (a) on average overall
immigrants are not perfect substitutes for native-born labour meaning that
it is possible for increased immigration not to affect the wages and
employment of native born labour, essentially meaning that migrant and
native labour do not necessarily compete for the same jobs. However this
overall finding obscures the fact that (b) less skilled immigrants are
much closer substitutes for unskilled natives than skilled immigrants are
for skilled natives. This means that any adverse labour market effects of
rising immigration are likely to be found among the less skilled
native-born labour force.
References to the research
1. Manacorda, M, Manning A., and J. Wadsworth (2012). "The Impact of
Immigration on the Structure of Wages in Britain", Journal of European
Economic Association, Vol. 10, Issue 1, pp. 120-151.
Details of the impact
Wadsworth's research has influenced policy made by government and
quasi-government bodies. Successive governments have tightened up
immigration of unskilled labour while forming policies to assess skill
shortages. This is shown by:
i. Wadsworth is a member of the Home Office sponsored Migration Advisory
Committee (MAC), a position he has held since 2007. This is the public
body set up specifically to advise the government on migration issues.
ii. Wadsworth's research (as outlined above) is cited and used in the MAC
reports advising the Home Office on:
- The formulation and establishing of the Home Offices skill shortage
list for the UK and for Scotland — now used as a determinant of entry
for skilled migrants from outside the EU (sources 1i & 1ii).
- The effect of relaxing restrictions on employment of A2 nationals
(1iii).
- The labour market effects of immigration (source 1iv).
iii. The reach of the MAC reports, including the fact that it was cited
by a government minister. Home Office Minister Damian Green commenting on
source 1i said "uncontrolled immigration can put pressure on public
services, on infrastructure and on community relations.....This report
makes clear that it can also put pressure on the local labour market."
(source 2)
The research has also fed the debate over the labour market effects of
immigration and there are numerous examples of it being cited in the
public discussion by key policymakers and stakeholders. The underpinning
research itself has been cited and discussed, for example, by The
Department of Work & Pensions research on the effects of
Immigration in the Labour Market (source 3i), The Low Pay Commission's
concern with the effects of immigration and the National Minimum wage
(source 3ii), and the House of Lords Select Committee on Economic
Affairs investigation into the economic impacts of immigration
(source 3iii). The Local Government Association used the research
to motivate its own analysis of the effects of the downturn on the demand
for migrant labour (source 3iv). It is also noteworthy that influential
think tanks on both sides of the immigration debate, citing the
underpinning research including the Migration Policy Institute
(source 3v), The Migration Observatory (source 3vi), the Work
Foundation (source 3vii), the IPPR (source 3viii) and the Information
Centre about Asylum and Refugees (source 3ix). Outside the UK, the
New Zealand government cited the paper in its own study of the labour
market impacts of immigration (source 3x).
The impact in terms of public discussion of Wadsworth's research is
further demonstrated by the fact that he was invited to speak about and
discuss the migration work of the MAC at a World Bank sponsored
workshop in Moscow ("Domestic Labor Shortages, Foreign Labor Demand, and
the Recruitment of Workers in Russia — Lessons from Host Country
Experiences toward a Future Work Program," Moscow, 19-20 June 2012) where
members of the Commonwealth of Independent States were interested in
adopting institutions that will encourage skilled migration and manage
less skilled migration. He has also been invited to speak at an ESRC China
Academy Social Sciences workshop (presenting "Immigration and the UK
Labour Market", at the "Migration & Labour Markets" workshop, Beijing,
8-9 June 2009), a Greater London Authority workshop (presenting
"Immigration and the Recession" at "The Impact of Immigration on London"
workshop, June 16th 2009), and a Westminster Legal Policy Forum
in London (presenting "View from the Migration Advisory Committee" at
keynote seminar: "Immigration — assessing the impact on new legislation"
(Source 4)
Sources to corroborate the impact
1. Management Advisory Committee Reports corroborating Wadsworth's
membership and use/citation of his research outputs:
i. "Skilled, Shortage, Sensible. The recommended shortage occupation
lists for the UK and Scotland", September 2008:
http://www.ukba.homeoffice.gov.uk/sitecontent/documents/aboutus/workingwithus/mac/first-lists/0908/shortageoccupationlistreport?view=Binary
ii. "Skilled, Shortage, Sensible. First Review of the recommended
shortage occupation lists for the UK and Scotland", Spring 2009.
http://www.ukba.homeoffice.gov.uk/sitecontent/documents/aboutus/workingwithus/mac/first-review-lists/0409/mac-skilled-shortage-list-2009?view=Binary
iii. "Review of the transitional restrictions on access of Bulgarian and
Romanian nationals on the UK Labour Market", November 2011.
http://www.ukba.homeoffice.gov.uk/sitecontent/documents/aboutus/workingwithus/mac/-restrictions-worker1/
iv. "Analysis of the Impacts of Migration", January 2012, COI 289226,
ISBN: 978-1-84726:. http://www.ukba.homeoffice.gov.uk/sitecontent/documents/aboutus/workingwithus/mac/27-analysis-migration/
2. BBC coverage of publication of Source 4 demonstrating impact upon the
public discussion of immigration issues. Features a quote from Home Office
Minister, Damian Green, commenting upon the MAC's findings: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-16484918
3. The following reports from Government agencies and external
think-tanks each cite and/or discuss Wadsworth's underpinning research:
i. Lemos, S. And Portes, J., (2009), "The impact of migration from the
new European Union Member States on native workers": Department of Work
and Pensions. http://webarchive.nationalarchives.gov.uk/20130314010347/http://research.dwp.gov.uk/asd/asd5/wp52.pdf
ii. "A Study of Migrant Workers and the National Minimum Wage and
Enforcement Issues that Arise", Report to the Low Pay Commission http://www.ucl.ac.uk/~uctpb21/reports/LPC.pdf
iii. House of Lords (2008), "The Economic Impact of Immigration. Volume
II: Evidence", Select Committee on Economic Affairs, April http://www.publications.parliament.uk/pa/ld200708/ldselect/ldeconaf/82/82ii.pdf
iv. Local Government Association (2009), "The Impact of Recession on
Migrant Labour": http://www.partnershipdevelopmentproject.org.uk/The_impact_of_the_recession_on_migrant_labour1.pdf
v. Migration Policy Institute, (2009), "Immigration and the Labour
Market", report to the Equalities and Human Rights Commission: http://www.migrationpolicy.org/pubs/Immigration-and-the-Labour-Market.pdf
vi. Migration Observatory (2011), "The Labour Market Effects of
Immigration": http://www.migrationobservatory.ox.ac.uk/sites/files/migobs/Briefing%20-%20Labour%20Market%20Effects%20of%20Immigration_0.pdf
vii. "Migration Myths: Employment, Wages and Labour Market Performance",
The Work Foundation, http://www.theworkfoundation.com/assets/docs/publications/33_migration%20myths.pdf
viii. IPPR (2009), "The Economic Impacts of Migration on the UK Labour
Market", Economics of Migration Working Paper No. 3: http://m.ippr.org/publication/55/1678/the-economic-impacts-of-migration-on-the-uk-labour-market
ix. ICAR (2008) "Navigation guide : Employment issues for refugees and
asylum seekers in the UK", http://www.icar.org.uk/employmentguide_24_07_2008%20(2).pdf
x. "The Impact of Immigration on the Labour Market Outcomes of New
Zealanders", IMSED Research paper, New Zealand Department of Labour
http://www.dol.govt.nz/publications/research/impacts-labour-market-outcomes/impacts-labour-market-outcomes.pdf
4. An example of Wadsworth's impact upon public discussion of migration
policy is his invitation to speak at "The View from the Migration Advisory
Committee", Westminster Legal Policy Forum, London, March 23 2011.
http://www.westminsterforumprojects.co.uk/forums/event.php?eid=230