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The Changing Demographic Picture of the UK National Statistician's Annual Article on the Population
An overview of how the size and structure of the UK is changing over time, latest trends in fertility, and work undertaken to improve quality of population and migration statistics.
Author: Karen Dunnell
Population Trends, vol 130 Winter 2007, pp 9-21. ISSN: 0307-4463
The population of the UK is currently growing at its fastest rate since the 1960s, increasing by two and a half per cent between mid-2001 and mid-2006. While life expectancy continues to increase, fertility rates have also been increasing in the last five years and are currently at their highest level since 1980. In addition, international migration has led to the UK population growing by an average of 500 people per day over the last five years. The population is also becoming increasingly diverse and mobile, and these factors make it increasingly challenging to measure population change accurately.
This is the first of a series of annual reports on the population of the UK; these reports will provide an overview of the latest statistics on the population and will also focus on one specific topic - for this report the topic is fertility and, in particular, the impact of migration on fertility, but different topics will be covered in future years. The reports will also highlight the key strands of work being taken forward within the National Statistics Centre for Demography in order to improve UK population statistics. More detailed information on the populations of Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland are available in the annual demographic reports produced by the respective devolved administrations.
Published in web format: 11 December 2007 at 2:30 pm