The Great White Replacement in the UK By Richard Miller (London)

The Great Replacement continues in full force in Britain. New figures from the Office for National Statistics, projects that the UK population will reach 73.7 million by mid-2036, which is far ahead of previous predictions. The same thing is being observed in America and Australia. The increase will be predominately from migration, and it is well known that most migration is of non-Whites, mainly Third World people, and then mostly military aged males, as in the US, at the southern border.

At another article at this blog, "Migration is Permanently Altering Britain, Not for the Best," I quote at length from a critical article that appeared in The Telegraph, giving a dire warning of what this demographic shift is set to bring, and has already brought.

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2024/jan/30/uk-population-projected-to-grow-to-nearly-74m-by-2036

"The UK population is projected to grow to 73.7 million by mid-2036, according to new figures from the Office for National Statistics, which predicts hitting the 70 million mark a decade earlier than previously thought.

This represents an increase of about 6.6 million, or 9.9%, from the estimated 67 million in mid-2021.

Long-term international net migration – the difference between the number of people entering the country and leaving – is projected to account for 6.1 million of the increase, with the remainder coming from a higher number of births than deaths.

All the figures are projections, not predictions or forecasts, because they are based on current and past trends.

The actual levels of future migration and population may be higher or lower, and will be "affected by policy changes as well as the impact of as yet unknown migrant behaviour patterns", the ONS said.

The new projections assume that net migration will fall over the next few years from a peak of about 670,000 in the 12 months to June 2023, before settling at 315,000 from 2028 onwards.

Over the 15 years from mid-2021 to mid-2036 it is projected that 10.8 million people will be born, 10.3 million will die, 13.7 million will move long-term to the UK, while 7.6 million people will emigrate.

The new projections point to the "likelihood of higher levels of international migration over the long-term" than in previous estimates, said the ONS's head of population and household projections, James Robards.

"It is important to recognise that there is uncertainty in the provisional international migration estimates," he stressed. "Future migration will be affected by policy changes as well as the impact of as yet unknown migrant behavioural patterns in the future."

The latest projections suggest the UK population could hit 70 million by mid-2026 – a decade sooner than in figures published in 2022, which projected a date of mid-2036.

They also suggest the size of the UK population aged 85 and over could grow in the next 15 years from 1.6 million (2.5% of the total population) to 2.6 million (3.5%).

The demographic mix of the population is projected to continue tilting more towards older age groups. People aged 75 and over could account for one in 10 of the total population by 2029 and one in nine by 2037 – the same year that people of pension age are projected to account for one in five.

The total projected increase in the UK population over the next 25 years is proportionately less than that over the past 25 years. From mid-1996 to mid-2021, the population grew by 8.9 million (15.3%), while from mid-2021 to mid-2046 it is projected to grow by 9.5 million (14.2%)." 

 

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Tuesday, 30 April 2024

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