News

​Ethnic diversity in the music industry has plummeted since 2020, study finds

The rates of BAME people working in the music industry are down by 1% in two years

The number of BAME people (Black, Asian, and minority ethnic) working in the music industry has dropped in the past two years, a new study reveals.

Published by British umbrella organisation UK Music, the recent study revealed that the number of people who identify as BAME working in music now only account for 21.04% of the industry, down from 22.3% in 2020.

On top of that, entry-level positions also dropped by a huge 10% in two years from 34.6% in 2020 to 23.6% in 2022. For senior-level jobs, the number of BAME people in those positions accounted for just 18.3% this year compared to 2020’s 19.9%.

Read this next: One in three have experienced discrimination on a night out, according to new study

UK Music’s Diversity Report also stated that the number of respondents had risen in those two years, suggesting that efforts to further career progression might be “having an effect”.

“Our 2022 survey shows how those from Black, Asian and other diverse communities have been hardest hit by the impact of Covid-19,” said Ammo Talwar, UK Music Diversity Taskforce’s chair.

“The drop in the percentage of employees in several sectors of the industry is further evidence of why we must not take our foot off the accelerator when it comes to driving positive changes on diversity and inclusion as swiftly as we can.”

Read this next: New report sheds light on music industry's lack of racial diversity

Elsewhere in the report, UK Music looked into gender disparity in the music industry and found an increase in the number of women working in music.

According to the study, 52.9% of those working in music in 2022 identified as a woman, up from 49.6% in 2020. The number of mid and senior-level roles also rose in those two years.

Read the full report here.

Gemma Ross is Mixmag's Editorial Assistant, follow her on Twitter