A report in today’s Times says that Poles are now leaving Britain faster than they are arriving – according to 3rd quarter data from the migrant workers’ register and more recent informal if informed assessments.
The reasons: the tightening UK economy; the weakening pound (and strong zloty); and a surge in the Polish economy, which has pushed up wages there.
Poles represent two-thirds of all work registrations in the UK from the Eastern European EU accession states. There’s a telling quote in the report from a Polish painter who has been working in the UK:
“Two years ago I could make five times the amount of money here than I could in Poland. Now the wages are about the same and the living costs in the UK are much higher. There is a lot of work in Poland, probably more than in the UK. It’s a good time to go back. The feeling is: why be away from your family and your home-land for no reason?”
This is in line with some EBRD research I blogged about – and may cause the ONS to revise their population forecasts, which are heavily influenced by migration predictions.
We are likely to see this in other Eastern European migrant groups ie Ukrainians too
reverse migration