“…The persistent disadvantage affecting, particularly, the 2011 cohort identified here -most of whom (at least in the Black Caribbean group), will have been born in the UK -offer little confidence in this as an explanation. Rather, these findings would appear more in keeping with work exposing the 'ethnic penalty' which continues to affect the access of minority groups to employment (Ashe and Nazroo, 2016;Battu and Sloane, 2002;Castilla, 2008;FRA, 2017;Heath and Cheung, 2006;Khattab and Johnson, 2015;Maume, 1999;Rafferty, 2012), education (Boliver, 2016;Zimdars et al, 2009) and elsewhere (Borjas, 2006;Heath and Smith, 2003;Longhi and Platt, 2008;Platt, 2005), and the ways in which persistent racism limits access to positive socioeconomic outcomes including social mobility (Virdee, 2006).…”