jceg316
Landlord.
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- Sep 8, 2014
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How about educating me with that bit of statistical data I linked to, I take it you must have some different understanding of it?
Also I meet more 'foreigners' each day than I do native British and I get on fine with most of them.
Yeah sure, in my career as a data analyst I've had to teach interns and line manage juniors; I really enjoy teaching people about data, statistics, and interpreting them. Heck, I've had to use data to stop my line managers from making poor decisions.
I'm reading these statistics assuming they're from a valid study with a good sample population.
There's quite an important statistic in that survey: "It shows that the Muslim population is relatively young - 33% were aged 15 or under in 2011, compared to 19% of the population as a whole." This means there is a smaller working population compared to the rest of the UK, and the employed population of both takes into account children and those retired.
Let's look at the numbers though. Comparing 20% of 2.7 million people to 35% of 62.94 million (that's the UK population - Muslim pop), those numbers are so wildly different they can't be equally compared statistically speaking. And really it doesn't make sense when you think about it, comparing some very top level employment stats of one minority group in Britain against Britain's entire population. I know you're probably thinking "but it was written in a BBC article" - journalists aren't great with stats and I see a lot of questionable sentences like this often, even on reputable sites like the BBC. (To be fair, journalism isn't my strong point!)
However, all this article points out is "only 20% of Muslims are employed" and that's all we can get from the statistics you linked to. This raises a lot of questions but on its own provides nothing that answers "why". Until we scroll a bit further down and this statistic jumps out: "46% of the Muslim population lives in the 10% most deprived local authority districts in England". I don't think it takes a genius to work out that if you live in a deprived area you're less likely to be employed, and there are many reasons for this.
This also compounded by institutionalised racism (or Islamophobia in this case). It doesn't take a great deal of Googling to find this (the video is on the extreme end, but the stats next to it provide some interesting reading), here's more information on what that video is based on, especially about a third to halfway down the page. Even the Sun, a bastion of right wing Britain, says Muslims are held back by racism at work.
There's another important statistic: the statistics which show a low number of women in employment, which is probably due to cultural reasons. It's a more traditional religion, religion has rarely been good for women's rights, but could also explain why employment is lower if there's pressure on half the working population to not work.
I hope you now feel educated on the statistics you presented. Always happy to help out, whether with homebrew or critical thinking around statistics.