The headline figures are also based on immigration statistics from 2008, before the economic situation changed, and assumes migration patterns will stay the same as the period 2003-2008. We've already seen a decline in inward migration and an increase in earlier migrants returning home that is likely to continue as the eastern european economies catch up with the west.
The figures also indicate that only 45% of the predicted population increase will be due to immigration, the rest is down to natural population growth and that balance will shift further if the immigration figures drop as expected, and as they have already started to.
The figures also indicate that only 45% of the predicted population increase will be due to immigration, the rest is down to natural population growth and that balance will shift further if the immigration figures drop as expected, and as they have already started to.

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