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PRIVACY
Economic Development

West Midlands migrant population rises by 60 per cent in decade

Region has third largest proportion of foreign-born residents in England after London and South East

Businesses in Sparkbrook, Birmingham's 'balti triangle'

A new study has revealed that the West Midlands migrant population has risen by 60 per cent in the last decade.

Oxford University’s Migration Observatory has released data showing the region has the third largest proportion of foreign-born residents in England – at 11.3 per cent – after London and the South East.

Of those who weren’t born in the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ, the largest group in the West Midlands is those from India, at 99,717 residents, followed by those born in Pakistan, Poland, Ireland and Jamaica.

About 93 per cent of the population of the West Midlands spoke English as their main language.

Of the 7.2 per cent (386,134) that did not, 72 per cent could speak English well or very well, and five per cent (19,375) did not speak any English at all.

Among those for whom English was not the main language, the most commonly spoken main language was Panjabi (17 per cent), followed by Polish (13 per cent) and Urdu (13 per cent).

A spokesman for BRAP, formerly Birmingham Race Action Partnership, a body dedicated to equality, stressed the city has always been a cultural melting pot.

“The first synagogue was built in the Middle Ages and he said Birmingham is a model for different cultures and creeds living tooth by jowl. The recent EDL protest showed a great unity across the city.