Why Indian immigrants in UK are more favoured than Pakistanis, Bangladeshis While immigrants from India received a healthy positive figure of +25, their South Asian counterparts are in negative territory. Bangladeshis have a net figure of -3. Pakistanis fare even worse at -4
A recent survey looking into attitudes towards immigrants of different origins has thrown up some interesting figures.YouGov asked 1,668 UK adults whether immigrants from various parts of the world had made a positive or negative contribution to British life.While immigrants from India received a healthy positive figure of +25, their South Asian counterparts are in negative territory. Bangladeshis have a net figure of -3. Pakistanis fare even worse at -4. Net figures are calculated by taking away the figure for “negative contribution” from the figure for “positive contribution”. There are a range of factors that might account for these differences – some historical, some economic and some social and religious.The initial flow of steady Indian migration started in the 1950s. As well as a notable number of politically disaffected Punjabi Sikhs, this flow included a stream of highly educated Gujarati migrants.