Scholar

Alan Manning

Alan Manning is a British economist and professor of economics at the London School of Economics.

Source: Wikipedia
H-index: 65
Economics 68%
Political science 14%
Isn’t it arguable that it was the liberalisations of the Tories under Boris (later partially reversed) that contributed to their destruction.

by Alan ManningReposted by: Jonathan Portes

Yet another article about worker shortages that fails to tell us about offered pay and conditions. Please journalist - just ask. Or, failing that, look at online job ads. Its not hard. www.theguardian.com/environment/...
Dairy farmers say worker shortage is threatening UK food security
The Arla cooperative says five in six farmers receive very few or zero applications for job vacancies
www.theguardian.com
Why the social care visa had to go. TLDR; in long-run it’s an expensive and ineffective way to hire care workers.

blogs.lse.ac.uk/politicsandp...
blogs.lse.ac.uk
Great to finally see data like this being published. Though more data means more opportunities for cherry-picking so look out for that. www.gov.uk/government/p...
Sponsored Work and Family visa earnings, employment and Income Tax
www.gov.uk
‪Great to hear from @sarahoconnorft.ft.com ft.ft.com
abt what happened to the UK truck driver shortage. Short-run: higher pay helped a lot. Medium-run: still structural issues making it hard to offer competitive pay and conditions.
www.ft.com/content/f320...
Whatever happened to the great truck driver shortage?
The underlying problems behind the crisis have not yet been resolved
www.ft.com
fjaellegaard.bsky.social
1/ 🚨 New paper! 🚨
How do the economic trajectories of children of immigrants vary across 15 high-income countries? We study intergenerational mobility of immigrants, using individual-level linked parent-child data across Europe, North America, and beyond. 🧵👇 #EconSky
Latest paper on comparing intergenerational mobility of the kids of migrants with kids of locals in 15 countries. It has a very long author list so I feel like a real scientist at last. www.iza.org/publications...
docs.iza.org
Good to see this happening. Important to have right not rushed decision. And that the labour market in social care is part of remit as current model doesn’t work. Lab mkt wasn’t really in Dilnot report as not part of their commission www.theguardian.com/society/2025...
Cross-party talks on adult social care reform in England to start next month
Wes Streeting hit back at claims that Casey commission would take too long to act, saying ‘it’s reporting next year’
www.theguardian.com
Good col from @sarahoconnorft.bsky.social. I think a lot of motivated reasoning on immig. Too many commentators start from view immig is good (or bad), then use any argument that comes to mind to make preferred case without bothering much about intellectual inconsistency
www.ft.com/content/2bb6...
Economists need to get their story straight on immigration
Focusing on the impact on the wages or employment levels of native workers is too narrow
www.ft.com

Reposted by: Alan Manning

cep-lse.bsky.social
“There is legitimate concern that zero-hours contracts are used to shift risk from employers onto lower-paid workers” @alanmanning4.bsky.social

in CentrePiece magazine:

cep.lse.ac.uk/pubs/d...

Separate Scottish visa a bad idea unless v small pilot for remote areas. If scotland has demographic problem its long-term. Temporarily increasing population doesnt solve it. Migrants on a visa like this are likely to leave when they can. www.bbc.co.uk/news/article...
UK government not considering Scottish visa to attract migrants - BBC News
Sir Keir Starmer has been urged to transfer powers to the Scottish government to help address labour shortages.
www.bbc.co.uk

by Ben H. AnsellReposted by: Alan Manning

benansell.bsky.social
Perhaps this won't go quite as viral as an exploding cow but Rethink Immigration is on at 4pm today on Radio 4, where I'm joined by the dream team of @sundersays.bsky.social, Rob Colvile, Madeleine Sumption and @alanmanning4.bsky.social.

www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/m...
BBC Sounds - Rethink, Rethink... immigration
Is the UK more divided than ever over immigration, or are there areas of consensus?
www.bbc.co.uk
Yes. When employers struggling to recruit they will often look to immigration to solve problem as they don’t like raising wages. Challenge for migration policy is to make sure there is some pressure to raise wages but not so much pressure they can’t cope
Sometimes nominal - think of P&O on Dover-Calais ferries - but probably more common to be real. Pressure on employers to raise wages is reduced if easy access to new workers even if they don’t cut nominal.
Errr I think this piece is over-simplified. A better framing is immigration can be used to reduce wages but doesn’t have to. And perhaps our immigration policy should make sure it doesn’t.
Not sure I get the economics of HO Impact Assessment on cost to business of higher salary thresholds on work visas. Seems to be mostly transfers from profits to migrant workers (who are now residents) which gets scored as big cost. Perhaps I'm missing something; help!
www.ft.com/content/e2df...
Overseas student and worker curbs will cost UK business £40bn, say official estimates
Home Office assessments come as new Labour government presses ahead with curbs on immigration
www.ft.com
Robert Jenrick offers "concrete cap" on net migration. Can have caps on immigration (at least managed part) but absent controls on emigration cannot have cap, concrete or otherwise, on net migration www.ft.com/content/5d26...
Robert Jenrick accuses UK Treasury of ‘gaslighting’ over benefits of migration
Tory leadership frontrunner says GDP figures ‘juiced up’ by arrivals
www.ft.com
No great secrets here. Similar episodes have always ended with agreements, often a bit dodgy, with countries of departure. Offshore processing has been tried a few times, never worked even in australia where its agreement with indonesia which did trick www.theguardian.com/world/2024/s...
How has Italy sought to cut irregular migration and could UK copy the policy?
Tunisia and Libya deals appear to have reduced small-boat crossings under Giorgia Meloni’s hard-right government
www.theguardian.com
Understand why you might think this a terrible decision. But wish article wld mention the uncomfortable trade-offs here. 59 year old with adult dependent may have big long- term fiscal cost tho details matter. All countries wrestling with this trade-off www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2024...
Valued GP ‘will be forced to leave UK’ after autistic daughter refused visa
London-based doctor Tajwer Siddiqui says Home Office rules are separating him from his wife and Alina, 19
www.theguardian.com

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