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PRIVACY
Economic Development

Brummies ‘better off’ saying nothing if they want to succeed in life

Even silence is considered more intelligent than Birmingham accent

Ozzy Osbourne

Speaking with a Birmingham accent is considered less intelligent or attractive than not opening your mouth at all, according to a university academic.

A study investigated how working-class applicants are being held down by a “class ceiling” when it comes to recruitment to top companies.

Professor Lance Workman, of the University of South Wales, carried out a series of tests after a report from the Social Mobility and Child Poverty Commission, which revealed evidence that recruiters favoured people with certain accents over others, regardless of academic merit.

The commission found the best paid jobs in the country were heavily dominated at entry level by people from more privileged socioeconomic backgrounds.

It discovered most people applying for jobs at elite firms had gone to Russell Group universities – and were more likely to be successful in their application than those who went to less selective universities.

Describing the discrimination as a wicked problem the commission recognised the scale of the complexity in turning it around and said political leaders needed to be “original, innovative and devious.”

Prof Workman said those who spoke ‘received pronunciation’ (RP) or ‘the Queen’s English’ had a better chance at being recruited because there was an implicit assumption that the posher the voice, the higher the IQ.

He said although RP was spoken by just three per cent of the population, it was recognised as the tongue of those belonging within the upper echelons of society.