'RACISM
STILL RIFE IN BRTAIN'S WORKPLACES' SAYS TUC
(23 April 2004)
Racism
is still blighting the lives of Britain's black workers, despite
the success of government employment schemes like the New Deal,
which have not benefited black workers as much as their white counterparts.
The TUC is calling on the Government to introduce extra measures
to reverse this trend, including legally requiring all employers
in the private and voluntary sectors to promote good race relations
in their organisations. Such a legal requirement already exists
for public sector employers.
In
a new report "Moving on . . . How Britain's unions are tackling
racism" the TUC reveals that despite sustained, record low
unemployment among the white population at 4.4 per cent, among black
and Asian people unemployment is two and half times greater at 11.3
per cent. This position is worse than in 1990 and confirms the trend
reported by the General Household Survey that unemployment rates
have got worse for second generation British born descendents of
immigrants. These figures hide the specific problems for some ethnic
minorities such as Bangladeshis whose unemployment rate is currently
one in five (20.4 per cent).
The
report argues that it is essential for the New Deal projects to
benefit black and Asian workers as much as white workers. At present
the New Deal for young people provides 10 per cent fewer sustained
jobs for black and Asian than for white people.
Brendan
Barber, TUC General Secretary, said: "Black and Asian workers
have not gained equally from Britain's expanding economy compared
to the white workers. To begin to reverse this trend the Government's
New Deal, welfare-to-work strategy, must become even more effective.
Unions give a high priority to equality at work and we are working
in partnership with many employers and the Government to establish
fairness. But racism is still rife in too many of Britain's workplaces."
The
TUC's report reveals that the New Deal for Young People has a worse
record in finding jobs for young black workers in London and the
Midlands than in Britain's other nine regions. This problem is particularly
acute as a very high proportion of Britain's ethnic minorities live
in London and the Midlands. Nearly 150,000 black and minority ethnic
young people passed through the New Deal by the end of September
2003. Of these nearly half (69,660) were from London. But just 31
per cent of New Deal leavers in London have left for sustained jobs
- the worst performance of any region. The national average is 38.4
per cent. Black and minority ethnic young people would almost certainly
benefit if overall New Deal performance could be improved in London
and the West Midlands.
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