SKILLED
ASIAN WORKERS ARE UNDER PAID & UNDER USED
(13 December 2004)
A
study published today by Skills for Business reveals employers pay
ethnic minority workers less money than their white counterparts.
The report shows the average hourly earnings for white men to be
£9.03, but this falls to £6.74 for Pakistani men. And
this isn't entirely arising from differences in personal characteristics
or education. UK employers are potentially wasting millions of pounds
by not making the most of the skills available throughout the entire
workforce - across all backgrounds.
The
study, undertaken by the Sector Skills Development Agency, found
that large sections of the UK workforce are under-utilised, with
many people having skills and qualifications that are not put to
good use by employers. For example, 29% of refugees were working
in September 2001 compared to 60% of ethnic minorities in the general
population. The work they do and seek is often not commensurate
with their skills.
Professor
Mike Campbell, Director of Strategy and Research at the Sector Skills
Development Agency, said:"We know that many employers suffer
from skills gaps and skills shortages which affect their profits
and productivity. This research shows that the skills they need
might well be out there - we just need to look in the right place,
or think a bit more creatively about how we can get people in to
the labour market.
"Skills
for Business, the new network of employer-led Sector Skills Councils,
has been tasked by the government with informing and influencing
policy on training and skills development relating to productivity.
Sector Skills Councils have a key role to play by gathering labour
market intelligence and understanding future skills needs, employment
patterns and demographic trends and making the business case to
employers so they can ensure their policies and practices are sufficient
to deal with potential labour shortfalls.
"Through
the establishment of the network, we are not only working to ensure
that the UK workforce has all the skills needed by employers, but
also that the skills of the existing UK workforce are effectively
utilised."
The
study also revealed that a high proportion of people who are currently
economically inactive would be able to work if certain barriers
were removed. Some two million people in this group do want to work
- a potentially huge supply of labour if circumstances could be
created to meet their desire to move into work.
The
UK Workforce: Realising our Potential'" was published on 13
December 2004. Copies can be downloaded from www.skillsforbusiness.org.uk
|