Just like in the United States...
Britain's ethnic minorities still face significant
barriers to social mobility despite
many having better qualifications than their white counterparts, according to
researchers at the University of Manchester.
Chinese, Indian, Irish, Bangladeshi and black
African students are now outperforming their white British peers in obtaining
five or more GSCEs at grade A* to C, but increased attainment over the past 20
years has failed to translate into improved job outcomes, say academics from
theCentre
on Dynamics of Ethnicity.
About 43% of Chinese and 42% of Indian people had a
degree-level qualification in 2011, compared with 26% of white British, while
the most disadvantaged of the black and ethnic minority groups (BME) –
Pakistani and Bangladeshi – had almost quadrupled their rates of degree-level
qualifications since 1991.
Dr Laurence Brown, who contributed to the report,
said: "It's clear that ethnic minorities in Britain are – in many cases –
outperforming their white peers in both secondary and higher education.
However, very few of these gains in education have translated into employment
outcomes."
Black male unemployment has remained persistently
double that of the white male population over the past two decades, and
although self-employment is often seen as a promising route for ethnic economic
advancement, for Pakistani men there is a disproportionate clustering in the
transport sector - 53% of self-employed Pakistani men working in the transport
industry compared to 8% of the rest of the population.
They found that 43% of white men and 45.6% white
women moved up to a higher socio-economic class than their father and that in
contrast, first generation black African, Indian and Pakistani and Bangladeshi
groups had significantly lower upward mobility rates.
Just 34.3% of first generation
Pakistani and Bangladeshi men and 27.6% of Pakistani and Bangladeshi women
moved up from the socio-economic class of their father.
The researchers also found that social mobility
differed with gender. Researchers noted that this was especially pronounced in
the second generation black Caribbean and Chinese groups, with black Caribbean
men (39.3%) and Chinese women (46.8%) experiencing lower rates of upward
mobility than black Caribbean women (67.3%) or Chinese men (56.9%).
"The need for new routes to mobility is crucial
given the over-exposure of ethnic minorities to deprivation and poverty in
Britain, " explains Brown. "A third of Pakistani and Bangladeshi
groups in England and a fifth of its Black African, Black Caribbean, and Arab
populations live in the country's most deprived neighborhoods compared with 8%
of the white British population.
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