The number of skilled migrants is set to rise 14 per cent to 812,000 over the
next four years as the UK looks to plug its growing skills gap.
According to a report commissioned by recruitment consultancy and IT
outsourcing firm
Harvey
Nash, skilled migrant workers will contribute more than £77bn to the UK
economy by 2012.
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The Future Flows report, compiled by the
Centre
for Economics and Business Research (CEBR), said migrants already account
for 2.5 per cent of the country’s total workforce and contribute over £36bn
worth of output, which is predicted to increase 2.8 per cent reaching over £49bn
by 2012.
The IT, telecommunications and transport sector will require an extra 19,000
skilled migrants by 2012, as demand for e-commerce and software specialists
rises. Their contribution is expected to add a £16.2bn to the sector.
Toby Strauss, executive chairman of
OrderWork,
said the report highlights the need for flexibility in resourcing approaches for
the channel.
“Those that stick with the ‘old models’ of UK only employed specialists, or a
blunt focus on outsourcing to the Far East, will struggle in competing with
those using more agile and flexible resourcing approaches, including new pools
of expertise such as those highlighted in the report from the newer members of
the EU.”
Strauss said it is interesting to note in this context that, as fast as UK IT
service companies offshore jobs, Indian outsourcers are increasingly needing to
deploy local resources in the UK as their end customers insist on onsite high
quality resources.
Highly skilled migrants’ spending supported £8.4bn of the UK’s gross value
added in 2007, and according to CEBR is set to rise to £13bn over the next four
years.
The report also found that the majority of these highly skilled migrants will
come from the European Union (EU) and others will come from Asia and Africa. In
2012 an estimated 365,000 skilled migrants will live in London, with a further
100,000 working in the south east and 49,000 in the east of England.
Strauss continued: “Eventually organisations will achieve the optimum mix of
employed and third party resources onshore, offshore and ‘near shore’ (ie from
the new members of the EU).”
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