Race for Opportunity Factsheet: Ethnic Minorities in the West Midlands
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Transcript of Race for Opportunity Factsheet: Ethnic Minorities in the West Midlands
Regional FactsheetEthnic Minorities in the UK - West Midlands
Celebrating 15 years of Action on Race 1995-2010
1995 - 2010
About Race for Opportunity (RfO)RfO is committed to improving employment opportunities for ethnic minorities across the UK. It is the only race diversity campaign that has access to and influence over the leaders of the UK’s best known organisations.
The campaign aims to:
• make clear the economic and business argument for organisations investing in race diversity;
• highlighttheresponsibility and role of leaders in delivering race diversity;
• communicate the need to speed up progress on the introduction of policies that further better representation of ethnic minorities;
• raiseawareness of the barriers preventing the BAME community from making progress in the workplace.
“There is an overwhelming opportunity for employers who embrace race diversity and inclusion to harness the diverse talent that exists in the UK today. The Race for Opportunity campaign in collaboration with its network members will continue to set the stage for race equality and progression in the UK and this challenge is one that I am very pleased to be part of.”
Ruby McGregor-Smith CEO, MITIE Group PLC and Chair, Race for Opportunity.
This factsheet is all about ethnic minority people in the West Midlands region and contains information that is available in the public domain.
Inside
[ 1 ] Landscape Data ........................................................................................................... 04
1.1 The West Midlands picture ........................................................................................ 04
1.2 An overall snapshot of the UK ................................................................................. 04
[ 2 ] Where do ethnic minority people live in the West Midlands? ..................... 05
[ 3 ] Focus on Birmingham ................................................................................................ 06
[ 4 ] Education ........................................................................................................................07
4.1 Where do ethnic minority students study in the West Midlands? ..................07
[ 5 ] Religion ........................................................................................................................... 08
5.1 A snapshot of the West Midlands ............................................................................ 08
5.2 The UK overall picture ................................................................................................ 08
[ 6 ] Employment .................................................................................................................. 09
6.1 Ethnic minority employment rate in the West Midlands .................................. 09
6.2 Employment Rate - UK ................................................................................................ 09
[ 7 ] Simple steps to get started on race equality .................................................... 10
Acknowledgements .......................................................................................................11
Race for Opportunity Members .............................................................................. 12
Regional Factsheet • West Midlands
04 I Race for Opportunity (RfO) | Regional Factsheet
[ 1 ] Landscape Data
Source: NOMIS – number and proportion of ethnic minority population in NUTS1 regions in the UK - 2008
White British
White Irish
White Others
White/Caribbean
White/African
White/Asian
Other Mixed
Indian
Pakistani
Bangladeshi
Other Asian
Caribbean
African
Other Black
Chinese
Others
Total
4,537,892
73,136
63,268
39,782
3,680
18,160
11,600
178,691
154,550
31,401
20,931
82,282
11,983
9,765
16,099
14,083
5,267,303
86.2%
1.4%
1.2%
0.8%
0.1%
0.3%
0.2%
3.4%
2.9%
0.6%
0.4%
1.6%
0.2%
0.2%
0.3%
0.3%
100%
Ethnic Group Number of People
Percentage of West Midlandspopulation
(86.2% of West MidlandsPopulation is White British)
West Midlands Population By Ethnic Group
Regional Factsheet • West Midlands
1.2 An overall snapshot of the UKLondon has the largest ethnic minority population in the UK. Of the 6.4 million ethnic minorities in the UK nearly half, 42.3%, live in London.
Source: NOMIS – number and proportion of ethnic minority population in NUTS1 regions in the UK - 2008
East of England
East Midlands
London
North East
North West
Northern IrelandScotland
South East
South West
Wales
West Midlands
Yorkshire and the Humber
435,400
371,100
2,735,800
100,900
543,500
29,800
145,700
583,700
163,400
91,500
792,500
471,900
7.7%
8.5%
36.2%
4.0%
8.0%
1.7%
2.9%
7.1%
3.2%
3.1%
14.8%
9.2%
6.7%
5.7%
42.3%
1.6%
8.4%
0.5%
2.3%
9.0%
2.5%
1.4%
12.3%
7.3%
Region Ethnic MinorityPopulation
Representation ofEthnic Minorities
Proportion of UKEthnic Minority
Population
Number, Representation and Proportion of Ethnic Minority Populationin NUTS1 Regions in the UK - 2008
United Kingdom 6,465,100 10.7% 100.0
1.1 The West MidlandsWest Midlands has the second largest ethnic minority population in the UK. Over 12% of the population is non-white.
05 I Race for Opportunity (RfO) | Regional Factsheet
Source: 2001 Census, NOMIS
More than 10% of the UK workforce is from an ethnic minority background and over 20% of the emerging workforce (children in primary and secondary school education), are from an ethnic minority background. In addition to this, 16% of UK-domiciled students at university in the UK are from an ethnic minority background. Britain’s current and future talent pool is racially diverse and progressive employers understand that it makes good business sense to utilise and grow this pool of talent.
Split of Ethnic Minority Population by Districts
Districts with the highest ethnic minority populations
Districts with the highest ethnic minority populations
Birmingham - 48.9%
Rest of West Midlands - 8.6%
Telford and Wrekin - 1.4%
Warwick - 1.5%
Solihull - 1.8%
Stoke-on-Trent - 2.1%
Dudley - 3.3%
Walsall - 5.8%
Coventry - 8.1%
Wolverhampton - 8.9%
Sandwell - 9.7%
Birmingham - 48.9%
Rest of West Midlands - 8.6%
Telford and Wrekin - 1.4%
Warwick - 1.5%
Solihull - 1.8%
Stoke-on-Trent - 2.1%
Dudley - 3.3%
Walsall - 5.8%
Coventry - 8.1%
Wolverhampton - 8.9%
Sandwell - 9.7%
Birmingham - 48.9%
Rest of West Midlands - 8.6%
Telford and Wrekin - 1.4%
Warwick - 1.5%
Solihull - 1.8%
Stoke-on-Trent - 2.1%
Dudley - 3.3%
Walsall - 5.8%
Coventry - 8.1%
Wolverhampton - 8.9%
Sandwell - 9.7%
Regional Factsheet • West Midlands
[ 2 ] Where do ethnic minority people live in the West Midlands?
Of the 30 districts in the West Midlands, Birmingham has the largest concentration of ethnic minority people. Nearly 49% of the total ethnic minority population in the West Midlands live in Birmingham.
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[ 3 ] Focus on Birmingham
In 2001, 67% of the total Pakistani population in the West Midlands, and 66% of the total Bangladeshi population in the West Midlands resided in Birmingham.
Mixed
Indian
Pakistani
38%
31%
67%
Ethnic Minority groupPercentage living
in Birmingham
Proportion of Ethnic Minority Population in Birmingham
Bangladeshi
Other Asian
Caribbean
African
Other Black
Chinese
Others
66%
48%
58%
52%
59%
32%
43%
• In 2006, the proportion of children aged under 16 who were from an ethnic minority background was about 50% and this is expected to rise to about 64% by 2026, confirming the growing diversity of Birmingham’s population.
Source: Cathie Marsh Centre for Census and Survey Research, University
of Manchester ‘Population forecasts for Birmingham, with an ethnic group
dimension’ – January 2007
• As Birmingham’s ethnic minority groups mature demographically, there will be noticeable growth in the workforce. The working age population will grow as a whole by 62,000 in the next 20 years, most of this growth at older ages. Ethnic minority residents will make up 50% of the population aged 40-64 by 2026, where they were 25% in 2006. Source: Cathie Marsh Centre for Census and Survey Research, University
of Manchester ‘Population forecasts for Birmingham, with an ethnic group
dimension’ – January 2007
• The number of ethnic minority residents aged 65 and older is expected to grow from 21,000 in 2006 to 36,000 in 2026, when this will be one quarter of the total aged 65 and older.
Source: Cathie Marsh Centre for Census and Survey Research, University
of Manchester ‘Population forecasts for Birmingham, with an ethnic group
dimension’ – January 2007
• The proportion of children aged under 16 in Birmingham, who are of Pakistani origin, is expected to increase to 28% by 2026, up from 21% in 2006.
Source: Cathie Marsh Centre for Census and Survey Research, University
of Manchester ‘Population forecasts for Birmingham, with an ethnic
group dimension’ – January 2007
• The ethnic composition of children can be taken as an indication of the longer-term future for Birmingham as a whole. It confirms a diverse and metropolitan population. Source: Cathie Marsh Centre for Census and Survey Research, University
of Manchester ‘Population forecasts for Birmingham, with an ethnic group
dimension’ – January 2007
Regional Factsheet • West Midlands
07 I Race for Opportunity (RfO) | Regional Factsheet
[ 4 ] Education
1 in 4 of pupils in primary school education in England are from an ethnic minority background. Source: DCSF release May 2009, ‘number of pupils in state maintained schools’
1 in 5 of pupils in secondary school education in England is from an ethnic minority background. Source: DCSF release May 2009, ‘number of pupils in state maintained schools’
Almost 1 in 6 (16%) of UK-domiciled students studying at UK universities is from an ethnic minority background. Source: 2007-08 ‘HESA Student Record’ published by the Higher Education Statistics Agency (HESA).
10 20 30 40 50
Aston University
University College Birmingham
Birmingham City University
The University of Wolverhampton
Coventry University
Newman University College
The University of Birmingham
The University of Warwick
Staffordshire University
The University of Worcester
55
53%
38.7%
35.6%
31.4%
26.9%
19.7%
14.5%
11.8%
5.8%
19.7%
Total Ethnic Representation
All UK Unis. - 16.0%
WM Pop. (18-24) - 21.2%
4.1 Where do ethnic minority students study in the West Midlands?During the academic year 2007-08, representation of ethnic minorities at universities in the West Midland was generally high, with seven out of 11 above the national average of 16.0%. However, only five of these were above the 21.2% representation of ethnic minorities in the local population. Aston University had the highest BAME representation in the region (53.2%).
Ethnic Minorities at Universities in the West Midlands (2007 - 08)
Regional Factsheet • West Midlands
“More BAME students join the unemployed after graduation than White graduates and
male Chinese and Pakistani students are twice as likely as the average to be unemployed” (2006)
Source: www.aimhigher.ac.uk/sites/practitioner/resources/Conf%20Summary%20Report%20final%20(2).pdf
Source: 2007-08 ‘HESA Student Record’ published by the Higher Education Statistics Agency (HESA).
08 I Race for Opportunity (RfO) | Regional Factsheet
[ 5 ] Religion
5.1 A snapshot of the West Midlands
The second largest religion outside Christianity in the West Midlands is Islam where 4.1% of the population is Muslim. The third largest religious group are Sikhs making up 2% of the population.
Christian - 72.6%
Religion not stated - 7.5%
No Religion - 12.3%
Other - 0.2%
Sikh - 2%
Muslim - 4.1%
Jewish - 0.1%
Hindu - 1.1%
Buddhist - 0.2%
Religions within West Midlands
Religions within the UK
Christian - 71.6%
Buddhist - 0.3%
Hindu - 1%
Jewish - 0.5%
Muslim - 2.7%
Sikh - 0.6%
Other - 0.3%
No Religion/Religion not stated - 23%
5.2 The UK overall picture
In the UK, 2.7% of the population stated their religion as Muslim making this the most common religion after Christianity. Figures for England, alone, show that 3.1% of the population stated their religion as Muslim.
Source: Census 2001, based on data released on or before 13 February 2003
Source: Census 2001 – Profiles - UK
Regional Factsheet • West Midlands
09 I Race for Opportunity (RfO) | Regional Factsheet
[ 6 ] Employment
6.1 Ethnic minority employment rate in the West Midlands
There are approximately 513,000 working age people from ethnic minority groups in the West Midlands, making up 16% of the total working age population in the region. Of the 513,000 working age people from ethnic minority groups, 277,000 or 54% are in employment. This figure is 20 percentage points lower than the employment rate for white working age people in the West Midlands of 74%. Source: West Midlands Regional Observatory ‘Employment and black and minority ethnic groups in the West Midlands’ Briefing paper February 2010
• Nationally, over half of Pakistani/Bangladeshi people of working age are living in low income households. People from Pakistani/Bangladeshi groups are more than twice as likely to be living in poverty than working age people from white, Indian and black Caribbean communities.
Source: West Midlands Regional Observatory ‘Employment and black and
minority ethnic groups in the West Midlands’ Briefing paper February 2010
• 74,900 people from the region’s key minority ethnic groups need to enter employment to match the white employment rate in the region. This figure comprises:
- 19,100 people from the black population (equally split between men and women),
- 11,300 from the Indian population and - 44,500 people from the Pakistani/Bangladeshi
population. 36,900 women from this group would need to enter employment to match the working
rate of white women. Source: West Midlands Regional Observatory ‘Economic Inclusion Baseline
Report for the West Midlands Executive Summary March 2009
• There are considerable differences between the employment, unemployment and inactivity rates of different BME groups and between males and females from each group. For example, Indian males have an employment rate 15 percentage points higher than black/black British males in the West Midlands.
• The biggest gaps in the employment rates between the West Midlands and England are amongst the Pakistani/Bangladeshi ethnic group. Employment rates for Pakistani/Bangladeshi males and females are more than 6 percentage points lower in the West Midlands than across England. Employment rates for black males in the region are also 6 percentage lower than nationally.
16% of the working age population are BAME, however only:12% of those in employment are BAME 8% of managers/senior officials are BAME
74% of working age white people are in employment
(compared to 76% nationally)......while 54% of working age
BAME people are in employment (compared to 60% nationally)
Source: West Midlands Regional Observatory ‘Employment and black and minority
ethnic groups in the West Midlands’ Briefing paper February 2010
Regional Factsheet • West Midlands
6.2 Employment Rate - UK
The UK ethnic minority employment rate is 59.2% Source: Ethnic Minorities in the Labour Market: Quarter 3, 2009 - Ethnic Minority Analysis Team,
November 2009
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Regional Factsheet • West Midlands
Leadership
• Consider appointing a Diversity / Race Diversity Champion to lead on the race agenda within your organisation.
• Develop a clear business case for working on race and link it to business objectives.
• Develop an action plan on race and integrate it into the key performance indicators of your managers.
People and Employees
• Tell your recruitment agencies, recruitment consultants and head-hunters that your organisation
is committed to racial equality and ask them to send you lists containing diverse candidates.
• Explicitly state in your recruitment marketing materials that individuals from diverse backgrounds
are welcome in your organisation.
• Monitor the ethnicity of your workforce and compare it to the local population.
Customers, Clients and Service Users
• Ensure your marketing teams or policy makers are signed up to your organisation’s commitment to
race equality.
• Review your advertising and promotional material to ensure they reflect the diverse marketplace, both in the content and images used.
• Consider including ethnic minorities in your focus groups and evaluation sessions for promotional or marketing campaigns.
Community Involvement
• Review the community impact work being done by your organisation and check whether they impact
on diverse communities.
• As education and skills are the critical components of any workforce, consider partnering with a local school where ethnic minority children could benefit from increased educational attainment.
• Develop links with local universities that have relatively high proportions of ethnic minority students and offer work placements/experiences.
Supplier Diversity
• Do an audit of your current suppliers to find out whether you have awarded any contracts to ethnic minority owned businesses.
• Consider publishing clear guidance notes to help ethnic minority businesses tender for contracts
with your organisation.
• Send your procurement officers to local supplier events to raise their awareness of products/services available from local ethnic minority suppliers.
[ 7 ] Simple steps to get started on Race Equality
11 I Race for Opportunity (RfO) | Regional Factsheet
Regional Factsheet - West Midlands
Acknowledgements
This publication has been made possible through funding from the Department for Local Communities and Government (DCLG) Tackling Race Inequalities Fund (TRIF)
“The history of the West Midlands shows that its manufacturing and entrepreneurial success is built on embracing and learning from the diverse communities that have settled here over many years. Today is no different as we host the largest diverse community outside London. We must continue to embrace change in demographics, in the way we do business and the way we live our lives. Accepting diversity and growing because of it are key to everyone’s future prosperity and we ignore this at our peril.” David Darlaston, Regional Director West Midlands, Business in the Community
Contact details:Business in the Community 83, Bournville Lane, Birmingham B30 2HP Tel: 0121 451 2227
12 I Race for Opportunity (RfO) | Regional Factsheet
AccentureAddeccoAddleshaw Goddard LLPAdvantage West MidlandsAmerican Express PLCArriva plcASDAAston CarterAvon & Somerset ConstabularyAvon Fire BrigadeB&QBaker & McKenzieBank of EnglandBarclays Bank PLCBBCBDO Stoy HaywardBIS (Department for Business, Innovation & Skills)Biotechnology & Biological Science Research CouncilBirmingham City UniversityBP InternationalBritannia Building SocietyBritish AirwaysBritish ArmyBritish EnergyBritish LibraryBristol City Council BTBUPACapgeminiCapital OneCentricaCiscoCitiCitizens Advice Communities & Local GovernmentCo-operative Financial Services plcCo-operative (The)Credit SuisseCummins Engine Company LtdDeloitte LLPDepartment for Children, Schools and FamiliesDepartment for Environment, Food & Rural AffairsDepartment for Work and PensionsDepartment of HealthDerby CollegeDeutsche BankEast of England Development AgencyEDF Energy
Education LeedsEnglish PartnershipsEnterprise Rent-A-CarEnvironment AgencyErnst & Young LLPEvershedsFreshfields Bruckhaus DeringerFSAFujitsu ServicesGlaxoSmithKlineGoldman Sachs InternationalGovernment Office For The North WestGoogleGuardian Media GroupHealthcare CommissionHerbert SmithHome OfficeHM Revenue & CustomsHM TreasuryHSBC Bank PlcIBM UK LtdJohn Lewis PartnershipJP MorganKPMGLaw Society England and WalesLearning & Skills CouncilLegal & General Investment MgmtLeicestershire ConstabularyLinklatersLloyds Banking GroupLondon 2012London AmbulanceLondon Borough of BrentLovellsMarks & Spencer plcMcDonald’s Restaurants LtdMerrill Lynch EuropeMetropolitan PoliceMichael Page Financial ServicesMidcounties Co-operative (The)Midlands HeartMinistry of DefenceMinistry of JusticeMITIEMDPGA (MoD Police & Guarding Agency)Morgan Stanley International LtdNational GridNational Museum of Science and IndustryNational Portrait GalleryNationwide Building SocietyNetwork RailNHS Employers
Northumbrian WaterNorth West Development AgencyNottingham Trent University OCS GroupOfComOffice of Fair TradingOffice of National StatisticsOne NorthEastOpen UniversityOrange PCSOTC Computing LtdPearson plcPertemps Recruitment PartnershipsPricewaterhouseCoopersProcter & GambleProvident FinancialPrudentialRolls-Royce Military Aero EnginesRoyal Air ForceRoyal Bank of Scotland GroupRoyal NavySainsbury’s Supermarkets LtdSantanderSerious Organised Crime Agency (SOCA)Severn TrentSheffield Hallam UniversityShell Companies in the UKSimmons & SimmonsSlaughter & MaySodexhoState Street CorporationThe Insolvency ServiceThomson ReutersTransport for LondonUBS Investment BankUniversity of BradfordUniversity of BristolUniversity of Central LancashireUniversity of DurhamUniversity of TeessideUniversity of West of EnglandUnum ProvidentVodafone LtdWelsh Assembly GovernmentWest Midlands PoliceWestminster City Council WPPWragge & Co
Champion Members are in BOLDList of RfO Members 08/03/2010
Race for Opportunity Members 2010
For further information on the Race for Opportunity campaign.Please visit www.raceforopportunity.org.uk or telephone 020 7566 8661
opportunity now is part of Business in the Community
Business in the Community - mobilising business for good.We inspire, engage, support and challenge companies on responsible business, working through four areas: Marketplace, Workplace, Environment and Community. With more than 850 companies in membership, we represent 1 in 5 of the UK private sector workforce and convene a network of global partners.
Business in the Community137 Shepherdess WalkLondon N1 7RQT +44 (0) 20 7566 8650F +44 (0) 20 7253 1877 E [email protected]
October 2008
designed and produced by scs marketing ltd | t: 01323 471050Product code: 01OPP000435
© Race for Opportunity March 2010 | design and print OSCCreative Product code: 01RfO000436
Race for Opportunityis part of Business in the Community
Registered Details137 Shepherdess Walk, London N1 7RQ. Telephone: 020 7566 8650Registered Charity No: 297716. Company Limited by Guarantee No: 1619253
opportunity now is part of Business in the Community
Business in the Community - mobilising business for good.We inspire, engage, support and challenge companies on responsible business, working through four areas: Marketplace, Workplace, Environment and Community. With more than 850 companies in membership, we represent 1 in 5 of the UK private sector workforce and convene a network of global partners.
Business in the Community137 Shepherdess WalkLondon N1 7RQT +44 (0) 20 7566 8650F +44 (0) 20 7253 1877 E [email protected]
October 2008
designed and produced by scs marketing ltd | t: 01323 471050Product code: 01OPP000435
Race for Opportunity Board Members
MITIEMs Ruby McGregor-SmithCEO and Chair RfO
ASDA Ms Sarah DickinsRetail People Director
Barclays Bank PLC Mr Vivek Ramachandran Head of UK Cash and Trade
British ArmyColonel Mark AbrahamAssistant Director Employment
BT Mr Ray Lerclerq Chief Financial Officer, Global Services
EDF Energy Mr Patrick ClarkeDirector of Connections
KPMG Ms Michelle Quest Head of People for the UK
Department of Health Mr Surinder SharmaNational Director for Equality & Human Rights
Appointment Commission Ms Anne WattsCBE, Chair
Paradoes Mr Denys RaynerCEO
Pertemps People Management Ms Carmen Watson, Managing Director - Commercial Division
Roast Mr Iqbal WahhabCEO
Sainsbury’s Supermarkets Ltd Mr Jat Sahota Head of Corporate Responsibility
Shell Companies in the UK Mr James Smith, Chairman
The Royal Bank of Scotland GroupMr Ron Teerlink Chief Administrative Officer
Transport for London Mr Andrew Quincey Director of Group Procurement