"LEVELLING UP" LABOUR SUPPLY
Lead Research Organisation:
University of Portsmouth
Department Name: Sch of the Env, Geography & Geosciences
Abstract
The Coronavirus pandemic has led to increases in retirement and long-term sickness, and Brexit and the pandemic together have led to a reduction in the number of EU workers in the UK. Together, these changes amount to a large reduction in the size of the workforce, which is the primary reason for difficulties faced by employers in most sectors recruiting staff since the ending of 'lockdown', as well as issue of pay and conditions and their geographical and social inequalities.
Little is known about the uneven geography across the UK in these sources of reductions in the workforce in driving the sharpest rises in job vacancies in rural areas and some London boroughs, precisely the areas most dependent on foreign labour. This information is important in designing policies to effectively address "Levelling Up" the economic fortunes of different parts of the UK, with some places short of workers, at least in the short term; and others short of jobs, in particular well-paid jobs.
The UK Government has promised a transformation to a high-wage economy following Brexit, predicated on the view that reduced labour supply will stimulate investment and innovation to raise productivity, and that the UK has become locked-in to a low-cost economic model dependent on cheap international labour. The research will produce new datasets as the latest evidence becomes available, including the 2021 Census of Population, analysis and insights to assess this claim and its geography, by examining links between local changes to local labour demand, supply, wages, productivity and unemployment.
More generally, the research will better understand the impact of Brexit and the pandemic on local labour markets and local economies in different parts of the UK, to inform planning for future economic resilience to 'shocks', and to assess the effectiveness of the UK new immigration policy in meeting labour demand and skills shortages in all parts of the UK.
Little is known about the uneven geography across the UK in these sources of reductions in the workforce in driving the sharpest rises in job vacancies in rural areas and some London boroughs, precisely the areas most dependent on foreign labour. This information is important in designing policies to effectively address "Levelling Up" the economic fortunes of different parts of the UK, with some places short of workers, at least in the short term; and others short of jobs, in particular well-paid jobs.
The UK Government has promised a transformation to a high-wage economy following Brexit, predicated on the view that reduced labour supply will stimulate investment and innovation to raise productivity, and that the UK has become locked-in to a low-cost economic model dependent on cheap international labour. The research will produce new datasets as the latest evidence becomes available, including the 2021 Census of Population, analysis and insights to assess this claim and its geography, by examining links between local changes to local labour demand, supply, wages, productivity and unemployment.
More generally, the research will better understand the impact of Brexit and the pandemic on local labour markets and local economies in different parts of the UK, to inform planning for future economic resilience to 'shocks', and to assess the effectiveness of the UK new immigration policy in meeting labour demand and skills shortages in all parts of the UK.
People |
ORCID iD |
Donald Houston (Principal Investigator / Fellow) |
Related Projects
Project Reference | Relationship | Related To | Start | End | Award Value |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
ES/X005828/1 | 01/12/2022 | 30/03/2023 | £388,511 | ||
ES/X005828/2 | Transfer | ES/X005828/1 | 31/03/2023 | 30/05/2025 | £381,462 |
Description | This Researchfish submission only relates to the first 4 months of the project. Nevertheless, there were some emerging contextual findings: 1. Labour shortages in the UK display considerable regional variation, with some areas short of workers and some short of jobs. 2. Rural areas are experiencing the greatest labour shortages. 3. EU workers are concentrates in cities (particularly London), areas of social deprivation and some agricultural districts. 4. Places with greater concentrations of EU population tended to have slightly lower Leave votes in the Brexit Referendum, suggesting that exposure to EU populations is positively associated with attitudes to EU membership - although the opposite is true in some remoter rural areas. |
Exploitation Route | Policy makers allocating national and local priorities for interventions to boost participation in the labour market, and in designing the UK's new immigration system. |
Sectors | Government Democracy and Justice |
Description | Presentation at UK In a Changing Europe conference, "Immigration after Brexit: where are we going?" |
Form Of Engagement Activity | Participation in an activity, workshop or similar |
Part Of Official Scheme? | No |
Geographic Reach | National |
Primary Audience | Policymakers/politicians |
Results and Impact | Presented results on the Geography of Immigration (countries of origin and pattern of 'settlement' within the UK) from the 2021 Census of Population. This was one of a number of presentations at a conference organised by ESRC's UK In a Changing Europe on the UK's new post-Brexit immigration system. There were approximately 150 people present plus another 1,000 participating online. I spoke to a number of journalists, a trade unionist, an MP, academics and a diplomat from the Brazilian Embassy, which raised awareness of my ongoing research. |
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity | 2023 |
URL | https://ukandeu.ac.uk/events/immigration-after-brexit-where-are-we-going/ |