Muslim men are 76 per cent less likely to be employed than their white Christian counterparts, according to research by the Research Centre for the Study of Ethnicity and Citizenship at the University of Bristol.
BBC teamed up with social scientists at the university to examine discrimination at managerial level jobs by submitting job applications for 100 sales jobs with two identical CVs with the names "Adam" and "Mohamed".
The CV with the English name Adam received 12 positive responses and four inquiries from head-hunters but the one with Mohamed only attracted four positive responses and two inquiries.
"I thought the response rate would be less than 50 per cent (for the Muslim-sounding name) so it's worse than I thought, especially in a city like London. It's so diverse, people coming in and out of the city, from different parts of the world, looking for work, a city very hungry for talent. Yes, it's worse than I thought," he said.
"It's (name-blind applications) clear it makes a difference to the numbers of people from minority groups, in particular for ethnic minorities, who get a chance of getting an interview. It's also a really easy thing to implement. There's no real reason to not be doing this," he said.
The BBC's findings will be aired on its 'Inside Out London' show later today.
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