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Immigration law firm Migrate UK says companies are struggling to recruit foreign workers

31 October 2022
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Nearly 97 per cent of UK employers are still unable to sponsor EU or non-EU workers despite talent shortages, according to Abingdon-based expert immigration law firm, Migrate UK.

Latest Government data analysed by the firm reveals that only 3.5 per cent of UK employers currently possess a licence to sponsor EU or non-EU workers - despite widespread shortages of both skilled and unskilled migrant workers nationwide.

With unemployment now at its lowest level since 1974 according to latest ONS figures, many organisations - from large PLCs to privately owned businesses - are still failing to use sponsor licences to aid recruitment.

This is despite the fact that for the vast majority of EU workers, employers need to hold a sponsor licence from the Home Office to employ them following Brexit.

Jonathan Beech, Managing Director of Abingdon-based Migrate UK, said: “Our analysis of government data of active businesses found there are 1.4 million private sector employers in the UK.

"While the Government's own list of current registered sponsors shows that only approximately 50,000 hold a licence, which means that just around 3.5% are currently in a position to employ new EU or non-EU arrivals.

“Shockingly, since our last analysis prior to Brexit in May 2020, there has only been about a 1.5 per cent increase in sponsor licence holders among businesses – even though this was the biggest change to the UK immigration system in nearly 45 years.

"When new clients come to us they often say they have delayed this process due to the perceived cost, complexity and amount of red tape needed to do so.”

“This is not only worrying for the individual UK businesses having sufficient talent in place to provide products and services effectively, but also UK plc. We’re hearing day in and day out of the issues firms are having in recruiting sufficient staff, especially those in the hospitality, science and engineering sectors.

“With the Home Secretary returning less than a week after resigning from her previous role, some businesses may be living in hope for some mooted changes to the shortage occupation list in the coming weeks, the key problem - aside from including some much needed ‘less’ skilled occupations such as care workers or chefs - is that this list isn’t attractive as it once was to employers.

"To really benefit from this list certain jobs should be exempt from the Immigration Skills Charge (between £364 and £1,000 per year of sponsorship, payable by the employer), plus the costs of the NHS Surcharge (between £470 and £624 per person per year), normally covered by the employee. So this is a large undertaking for overseas recruits especially for lower paid roles.”

With sponsor licence applications currently taking two to three months to process on average, Migrate UK is advising businesses suffering from persistent skills shortages to apply for a sponsor licence now to support their recruitment.

Once a business has a licence in place it can be used as needed. While for potential overseas candidates those employers who already have a licence will be more attractive than companies without - as they know the business is already approved by the Home Office for up to four years at a time*, and it will minimise delays to their onboarding.

“Those businesses with a licence in place are not only able to recruit more readily now to help deal with their present skills shortage, but will also be better prepared when the economy takes off again following current UK and worldwide challenges,” said Jonathan.


Peter Davison is deputy editor of The Business Magazine. He has spent his life in journalism – doing work experience in newsrooms in and around Bristol while still at school, and landing his first job on a local newspaper aged 19. By 28 he was the youngest newspaper editor in the country.

An early advocate of online news, he spent the first years of the 2000s telling his bosses that the internet posed both the biggest opportunity and greatest threat to the newspaper industry and the art of journalism. He was right on both counts.

Since 2006 he has enjoyed a career as a freelance journalist. He lives in rural Wiltshire with one wife, two children, and three cats.

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