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Centre of Migration Research

John Salt, Marek Okólski. 2014.

Polish Emigration to the UK after 2004; Why Did So Many Come?

 

Central and Eastern European Migration Review, Volume 3, no. 2, December 2014 | pages: 11-37

online


Abstract

Despite the abundance of studies of Polish migration to the UK immediately before and in the after-math of accession to the EU in 2004, one fundamental question has never been clearly answered: why did so many Poles move to the UK? We have sought to provide general explanations, rather than in-quiring into the range of observed diversity. We begin by putting together statistical and other data from both ends of the flow in order to assess the scale of movement to and from the UK and to deter-mine the reasons for what may well have been the largest voluntary migration between two countries. We used data from both countries and especially the recently published statistics from the 2011 UK census to present a detailed picture of the characteristics of those involved. Polish statistics suggest a more ‘elite’ flow to the UK than to other countries. The UK census pictures a maturing settled popu-lation, still tending to occupy relatively lower skilled jobs but showing evidence of upward social mo-bility. The movements are particularly a response to demographic and economic factors in Poland and to a widespread but to some extent hidden shortage of labour in some sectors in the UK. These factors combine with a set of political circumstances in both countries to produce an explanatory framework that may be summarised as ‘right people, right place, and right circumstances.’
 

Keywords

post-accession migration; statistics of migration from Poland to the UK; determinants of migration from Poland to the UK