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The Demographic Consequences of

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The Demographic Consequences of. Immigration to the UK. David Coleman, ... Recent immigration ... here to stay an irrevocable feature of mature society. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Demographic Consequences of


1
The Demographic Consequences of Immigration to
the UK
David Coleman, University of Oxford david.coleman_at_
socres.ox.ac.uk http//www.apsoc.ox.ac.uk/oxpop
2
Major topics
  • Recent immigration situation and trend.
  • Effects upon total and working age population
    size and household numbers.
  • Effects upon population age-structure
  • Immigration as demographic salvation?
  • Effects upon population composition.

3
Current UK migration situation
  • Some (two-way) migration normal in advanced
    societies.
  • Work - related migration for highly skilled since
    1920, not controversial until recent expansion.
  • Net inflow 2002 153,000 foreign 245k, UK -91k.
    Net inflow since late 1990s historically high..
  • Most net immigration not work related.
  • New policy easier entry for labour and
    non-labour migration, expansion of low-skill work
    entry.
  • Two revisions of ONS migration estimates since
    2001 census complicate the story.
  • Not to mention three revisions of GAD population
    projections since 2001 census.

4
Net Immigration to UK 1963 2003 (1000s).
spliced series. Source data from ONS.
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6
Net migration to UK by citizenship
7
Work permit migration from outside EU (gross
inflow)(some labour migration categories not
included)
8
Net migration for purposes of work, UK 1991-2002
(thousands). Source International Passenger
Survey data from ONS
9
Spouse migration to the UK 1973 - 2001 (gross
inflow).
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11
Growth of male South Asian ethnic minority
populations of marriageable age, and
entry-clearance applications for wives/fiancees
1981-2001.
12
Asylum claims in UK, including dependants
1983-2003 (thousands). Source of data Home
Office.
13
Migration drives population growth. United
Kingdom, 2002-2031.Thousands. Source GAD 2004.
2002-based projections.
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15
UK population - no decline imminent
16
Population projections, Sweden, 2004 - 2050,
(millions) standard and zero-migration. Source
Statistics Sweden
17
Projected effect of immigration on US population
growth 1999 - 2100 .Source US Bureau of the
Census.
18
Projection of UK population aged 15-64
19
Entry to working age population
20
Effects of different migration assumptions on
household formation, 1996 - 2021. Assumes each
extra 40k immigration yields 450k households by
2021.
21
The case for more immigration - positive and
negative, theoretical and empirical
  • Demographic benefits - workforce, ageing.
  • Essential for economic growth.
  • Entrepreneurial benefits.
  • Fiscal benefits.
  • Fill skills shortages, keeps NHS going, IT needs.
  • Perform dirty jobs.
  • London / UK would collapse without them.
  • Cultural, social benefits of diversity.
  • All with no damage to native interests.

22
Three related demographic problems behind
argument for more immigrants.
  • End of growth of population, possible decline
  • End of growth and possible decline in labour
    force and of young labour force entrants failure
    of economic growth.
  • Population ageing leads to crises in pensions and
    old-age care.

23
Immigration can solve all that
  • Immigration cannot be stopped anyway.
  • Will sustain or expand population size.
  • Rejuvenated and expand workforce.
  • Rectify ageing population while saving natives
    from trouble of reproduction.
  • Everyone gets what they want and lives happily
    ever after.

24
Immigration as demographic salvation?
  • Do we need to be saved? Why should no decline
    targets be met (UN 2000)? Is zero growth or
    decline axiomatically undesirable?
  • UK has relatively benign workforce, population
    projections.
  • Immigration can keep population, or workforce
    size, approximately constant.
  • But that can require very large inflows and
    adjustment difficult.
  • Immigration can only 'solve' population ageing
    with large and infinitely increasing population
    increases.
  • Given sub-replacement fertility, migration to
    maintain constant size must eventually replace
    original population with immigrant population.
    Does a society save itself that way?

25
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26
Population ageing an unavoidable destiny
  • Population ageing here to stay an irrevocable
    feature of mature society.
  • Birth and death rates for a younger population
    gone for good.
  • With constant vital rates, population
    age-structure will eventually stabilize.
  • Longer life means even older populations, but
    changes meaning of old age.

27
Potential Support Ratio, UK 1980-2100 GAD PP
1998-based. Population Trends 103
28
No limits to migration? Immigration and the PSR
Population Trends 103
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31
Immigrants and their descendants in the British
labour market
  • Lower workforce participation rates
  • Higher unemployment
  • A similar story elsewhere in Europe

32
Workforce participation and unemployment by
birthplace, UK 2000
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Why migration trends may continue upwards.
  • Government policy to expand migration e.g.
    increase work permits aim 200,000, actual
    129,000 in 2002.
  • New channels for migration
  • Open doors to Eastern Europe
  • Amnesties (see Demography 2003)
  • Growth of marriage migration with growth of
    ethnic minority populations, if arranged marriage
    persists.
  • UK reputation for ease of entry /overstaying.
  • Long timetable for register, identity cards (if
    any).
  • But asylum may be trending downwards..

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37
Unattributable Demographic Change The New ONS
Miracle Ingredient! or Honey, I shrunk the
migration estimates.
  • Amaze your audiences!
  • Lose 290,000 people per decade!
  • Shrink your migration estimates overnight!
  • Banish that annoying population growth!
  • Remove those awkward inconsistencies!
  • Keep the 2001 Census (nearly) infallible!
  • http//www.statistics.gov.uk/about/methodology_by_
    theme/revisions_to_population_estimates/implicatio
    ns.asp

38
Another (semi) official view (Home Office RDS
Occasional Paper no 67).
39
Immigration and changes in population
composition UK and abroad.
  • Some countries make official projections of
    population by immigrant / foreign / ethnic
    minority origin (US, Denmark, Sweden, Netherlands
    etc.)
  • None official in UK since 1979
  • Despite higher (average) immigrant fertility,
    immigration level is the more important variable
    in all cases.

40
Total Fertility Rates by Ethnic Group, UK,
1965-2001, from LFS (own-child)
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45
Ethnic change in the USA, projected 1999 - 2100
46
US 1999 - 2100 projected proportion of
immigrant-origin minorities only
47
Percent of population foreign, Netherlands 2003
2050 medium variant and zero-migration
projections. Source Statistics Netherlands.
48
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49
Projected growth of population of foreign origin
2000-2050, selected countries, as of total
50
Sample trial projection, ethnic composition
trends , England and Wales 2001- 2051 (millions)
51
Trial projection of UK non-white population to
2051 (1000s)mortality constant EW 1998, TFR
declining from 2.14 - 1.90
52
Growth of foreign-origin population in Denmark,
three projections, showing projected
consequencesof recent restrictions (green line).
Source Statistics Denmark
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54
Conclusions
  • Positive immigration effect on working age
    population (less effective on actual workforce).
  • UK population, numbers of working age not
    declining even without migration.
  • Instead, renewed population and household growth
    medium term problem, mostly immigration-driven.
  • Replacement migration for working-age
    population difficult, for age-structure
    impossible.
  • Current migration projections seem conservative.
  • Continuation even of current level will promote
    substantial and progressive ethnic
    transformation.
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