As many as 456,073 migrants have launched a small or medium-sized business in Britain, according to the think-tank Centre for Entrepreneurs and due diligence platform DueDil.
The report titled 'Migrant Entrepreneurs: Building Our Businesses, Creating Our Jobs', found that migrant entrepreneurs are behind one in seven of all UK companies and that Irish, Indian, German, American and Chinese make up the top performing nationalities.
Ireland leads the charge with 48,854 founders running their own businesses across the UK, followed by India with 32,593 and Germany with 30,755.
"The majority of the public appreciate the value of migrant entrepreneurs, yet our politicians and media send out negative signals that risk alienating this vital group of job creators," said Luke Johnson, Centre for Entrepreneurs chairman and serial entrepreneur.
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According to the 'Migrant Entrepreneurs' report, the entrepreneurial activity among the migrant community was found to be nearly double that of UK-born individuals, with 17.2 per cent having launched their own businesses, compared to 10.4 per cent of those born in Britain.
They are also, on an average, eight years younger than indigenous entrepreneurs at 44 years-old compared to 52.
This is despite the extra challenges they face, including access to finance and cultural and language barriers.
This is despite the fact the public view immigration in a generally negative light and support a reduction in net immigration (68 per cent).