Closing off social care jobs to migrant workers will only harm a sector that’s already in crisis
- Written by Majella Kilkey, Professor of Social Policy, University of Sheffield

One big talking point to emerge from the UK government’s recently announced[1] plans to reform the immigration system was the proposal to end recruitment of social care workers from overseas. Anyone who has experienced the sector recently will know that it is hugely dependent on workers from abroad. So the move – laid out in a new white paper which went further than many expected – will have huge implications.
For those international workers already sponsored to work in the sector, a transition period will allow them to extend their visa until 2028. Other overseas nationals already in the UK with the right to work will be able to switch to a job in social care.
Critics[2] have argued for overhauling the visa system that allows employers to recruit care workers from overseas[3] amid evidence of widespread and systemic exploitation of workers[4]. But the plan to completely axe the health and care visa, without any proposed alternative, was unexpected.
In fact, a 2024 strategy for adult social care[5], published by industry body Skills for Care, acknowledged that international workers are “crucial” for the sector. It also recommended that the UK’s immigration policy recognise the sector’s need to recruit care workers from abroad.
The proposed fair pay agreement, through which the government hopes to tackle the staffing crisis in social care, would give care workers stronger collective bargaining powers and provide stricter enforcement of agreements on pay, terms and conditions. The government’s impact assessment[21] suggests, however, that the agreement will increase costs to councils, as well as those funding their own care. Higher costs to councils would need to be mitigated by increased investment from central government.
Martin Green[22], chief executive of Care England, and Christina McAnea[23], general secretary of trade union Unison, have said that the white paper’s depiction of care work as “low-skilled” adds to its low social status. It also runs contrary to the professionalisation agenda set out in the government-endorsed care workforce pathway. And, of course, it undermines efforts to attract “British workers” into the sector.
In the meantime, the latest data from industry body Skills for Care show that the sector has 131,000 vacancies[24] in England alone. Its vacancy rate at 8.3% is higher than the 6.9% for the NHS, and significantly higher than the 2.8% for the economy as a whole.
The same data source estimates that 540,000 new social care posts will be needed by 2040 to meet rising demand, as more people live longer with major illnesses and disabilities[25]. Relatives are put under immense pressure[26] to fill these care gaps, without the pay or resources to do so.
Without the international care workers who have helped the social care sector keep its head above water[27] since Brexit, the prospects look unimaginably bleak for the health and wellbeing of workers in the sector. And this is before we consider the impact on some of society’s most vulnerable people who need their care and support, as well as their families and kin.
References
- ^ recently announced (assets.publishing.service.gov.uk)
- ^ Critics (www.workrightscentre.org)
- ^ recruit care workers from overseas (centreforcare.ac.uk)
- ^ exploitation of workers (www.workrightscentre.org)
- ^ strategy for adult social care (www.skillsforcare.org.uk)
- ^ Sign up to our daily newsletter (theconversation.com)
- ^ contradicted by research, (theconversation.com)
- ^ care worker visa (theconversation.com)
- ^ bringing their dependants (centreforcare.ac.uk)
- ^ evidence shows (migrationobservatory.ox.ac.uk)
- ^ unpaid or hugely underpaid (www.versobooks.com)
- ^ Labour unions (www.unison.org.uk)
- ^ research evidence (www.frontiersin.org)
- ^ low rates of pay (www.communitycare.co.uk)
- ^ 21% in March 2024 (www.skillsforcare.org.uk)
- ^ fair pay agreement (www.ippr.org)
- ^ employment rights bill (bills.parliament.uk)
- ^ care workforce pathway (www.skillsforcare.org.uk)
- ^ “years away from delivery” (www.careengland.org.uk)
- ^ EPA-EFE/TOLGA AKMEN/POOL (epaimages.com)
- ^ impact assessment (www.communitycare.co.uk)
- ^ Martin Green (www.careengland.org.uk)
- ^ Christina McAnea (www.mirror.co.uk)
- ^ 131,000 vacancies (www.skillsforcare.org.uk)
- ^ major illnesses and disabilities (ageing-better.org.uk)
- ^ immense pressure (centreforcare.ac.uk)
- ^ head above water (www.kingsfund.org.uk)