Please enable JavaScript.
Coggle requires JavaScript to display documents.
ethnic inequality statistics - Coggle Diagram
ethnic inequality statistics
unemployment
2015/16, Pakistani (21%) and Mixed White/Black Caribbean (15%) were the top 2 ethnic groups living in the most employed-deprived neighbourhoods
2019, Black and Pakistanis were the most unemployed (8%)
2016, Black individuals were the most unemployed (10%) by ethnic background + gender
health
2016/17, quality of life scores lower than ] national average in White Gypsy and Irish Traveller (0.509) and Arab (0.677) ethnic groups
2017/28, Asian (47%), Chinese (50%) + Mixed race (50.7%) were below the national average for eating 5 a day
2019/20, Black (12.5K for every 100K)+ Mixed race (14.8K for every 100K) individuals were the top two ethnic groups to use the NHS's mental health, learning disability + autism services
2019, the least satisfied with hospital care were Bangladeshis (69.2%)
income/wealth
2019, Pakistanis earned the least weekly household income than any other ethnicity group - £334
2019, Bangladeshis had the lowest percent of individuals in the top fifth of incomes with 5% compared to Indians with 25% and Chinese with 27%
black workers with degrees earn 23% less on average than white workers
2019, Pakistani (30%), Bangladeshi (26%) and Black Africans (20%) were the top three groups living in most income deprived areas
education
6% of Black school leavers attended a Russell Group university, compared to 12% of mixed + Asian school leavers + 11% of White school leavers
Black Caribbean + Mixed white/black Caribbean had 3x higher exclusion rates than whole pupil population
2020/21, least likely to get a grade 5 or above were white Gypsy and Roma pupils (9.1%), traveller of Irish heritage pupils (21.1%) and black Caribbean pupils (35.9%)
2019/20, Black Caribbean (9.1%) + Black other (11%) were the lowest percentage of students achieving at least 3 A-grades at A-level
living standards
30.9% of Pakistani/Bangladeshis and 26% of Black individuals live in overcrowded accommodation, compared to 8.3% of White people
35.7% all ethnic minorities more likely to live in poverty compared to 17.2% White people
2017/19, Bangladeshi (24%) and Mixed white/Black African (33%) were top two ethnic groups living in non-decent homes
covid
1 in 20 BME hospitalised compared to 1 in 100 white people
BME patients accounted for 34% of critically ill despite making up 14% of population
ethnic minorities 3x more likely to catch C19, 5x more likely to experience serious outcomes
Chinese, Indian, Pakistani, Caribbean + other Black ethnicities had 10-50% high risk of death compared to whites