According to the latest research, technical sectors such as finance, data and analysis are showing a substantial shortage of British graduates, according to the Independent.
Emolument, a salary benchmarking website, analysed data from 32,000 establishments. It found that employers were prepared to offer salaries as much as 30 per cent above market to highly skilled graduates with degrees in finance and data analysis from non-British universities.
In IT and compliance foreigners can make up to 18 and 11 per cent more than UK graduates.
Graduates from abroad now make up 28 per cent of students in finance in British universities.
Some 90 per cent of foreign graduates work in London.
Alice Leguay, co-founder and COO at Emolument , said it’s a win-win situation as many graduates see the UK as a “land of opportunities” and UK employers can take advantage of the talents they can’t find in the UK.
“Many European graduates see the UK as an ideal location to kick off their careers: flexible career paths, a vibrant technological and entrepreneurial sector as well as fiscal incentives,” Leguay said.
“Equally, UK employers are keen to bring in highly skilled graduates as they struggle to find appropriately qualified staff in the UK due to a decline in science and maths education over the last 10 years,” she added.
Engineering and education graduates are most in demand in 2016, according to another survey by CV-Library.
There are more than 1,000 jobs available for both engineering and education graduates in the UK, the employment website found.
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