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Chinese ethnic group biggest earners in the UK | Chinese ethnic group biggest earners in the UK |
(about 1 hour later) | |
Chinese and Indian ethnic group workers have higher average earnings than their white British counterparts, the first official figures on the issue show. | Chinese and Indian ethnic group workers have higher average earnings than their white British counterparts, the first official figures on the issue show. |
But the data on the ethnicity pay gap, showed all other ethnic groups have lower wages than white British workers. | But the data on the ethnicity pay gap, showed all other ethnic groups have lower wages than white British workers. |
The Office for National Statistics said employees in the Bangladeshi ethnic group have the largest pay gap, earning 20% less than white British employees. | The Office for National Statistics said employees in the Bangladeshi ethnic group have the largest pay gap, earning 20% less than white British employees. |
On average, ethnic minorities earn 3.8% less than white ethnic groups. | On average, ethnic minorities earn 3.8% less than white ethnic groups. |
The categories are the official ones used by ONS. | The categories are the official ones used by ONS. |
In 2018, employees from the Chinese ethnic group earned 30.9% more than white British employees. | In 2018, employees from the Chinese ethnic group earned 30.9% more than white British employees. |
Hugh Stickland, senior ONS analyst, said: "Overall, employees from certain ethnic groups such as Indian and Chinese, have higher average earnings than their white British counterparts. | Hugh Stickland, senior ONS analyst, said: "Overall, employees from certain ethnic groups such as Indian and Chinese, have higher average earnings than their white British counterparts. |
"However, all other ethnic groups have average wages lower than for white British employees, with employees from the Bangladeshi ethnic group having the largest pay gap. | "However, all other ethnic groups have average wages lower than for white British employees, with employees from the Bangladeshi ethnic group having the largest pay gap. |
"However, once characteristics such as education and occupation are taken into account, the pay gap between white British and most other ethnic groups becomes narrower, though significant differences still remain." | "However, once characteristics such as education and occupation are taken into account, the pay gap between white British and most other ethnic groups becomes narrower, though significant differences still remain." |
Bangladeshis are the UK's lowest earners | |
The data - based on median gross hourly earnings between 2012 and 2018 - shows that the Chinese ethnicity group is the highest paid, receiving £15.75 an hour in 2018. | The data - based on median gross hourly earnings between 2012 and 2018 - shows that the Chinese ethnicity group is the highest paid, receiving £15.75 an hour in 2018. |
That group is followed by the Indian ethic group - which earns £13.47 an hour - and mixed/multiple ethnicity group, with a £12.33 hourly pay rate. | That group is followed by the Indian ethic group - which earns £13.47 an hour - and mixed/multiple ethnicity group, with a £12.33 hourly pay rate. |
The median pay of the white British group was £12.03. The Bangladeshi group had the lowest median hourly pay of £9.60 with the second-lowest paid group being of Pakistani origin at £10 an hour. | The median pay of the white British group was £12.03. The Bangladeshi group had the lowest median hourly pay of £9.60 with the second-lowest paid group being of Pakistani origin at £10 an hour. |
"The harsh reality is that even today race still plays a real role in determining pay," said Frances O'Grady, general secretary of the TUC. | "The harsh reality is that even today race still plays a real role in determining pay," said Frances O'Grady, general secretary of the TUC. |
"Ministers must take bold action to confront inequality and racism in the labour market. The obvious first step is to introduce mandatory ethnicity pay gap reporting without delay," she said. | "Ministers must take bold action to confront inequality and racism in the labour market. The obvious first step is to introduce mandatory ethnicity pay gap reporting without delay," she said. |
The government has consulted on whether mandatory reporting will help address disparities between the pay and career prospects of minorities. | |
The female gap | |
The government has already introduced mandatory reporting on the gender pay gap - which stands at 9.6% in favour of men - and the ONS data also shows discrepancies in male and female earnings in the ethnic groups. | |
The Chinese and Indian groups, which both have the highest rate of hourly pay, were among those with the biggest gender gaps. | |
Chinese men on average earned 19.1% more than women and Indian men earned 23.2% more than women. | |
But women in the Bangladeshi ethnic group earn more than their male counterparts - with a 10.5% gap. | |
The ONS said, though, that the sample size for the Bangladeshi group was smaller and susceptible to inaccuracy compared with other ethnic groups. | |
London's gap | |
London, which has the highest proportion of its population classified as an ethnic minority group, also has the largest pay gap of 21.7%. | |
The ONS found this gap was reversed in other parts of Britain. In the north-east of England, for instance, employees from an ethnic minority group had average earnings that were 6.5% more than the average earnings of white employees. | |
Birth-place divide | |
The ONS says that where someone is born can have an influence on how much they are paid. | |
"By comparing those who were born in the UK and those who were not, it may give us an idea of what sort of effect having a UK education and the higher likelihood of speaking English as a first language may have on those from an ethnic minority background," the ONS said. | |
It found those in the Bangladeshi ethnic group - who had been born in the UK - earned 8% less than white British employees. But for Bangladeshi employees born outside the UK the gap was 26.8%. | |
When taking other factors into account, such as education, UK-born employees in the Indian and Chinese ethnic groups do not have pay gaps that are "statistically different" from the UK-born white British employees, the ONS found. | |
For example, almost a third of workers in the Indian ethnic group work in professional roles which means they tend to be higher-paid. |