Saturday 21 January 2012

Polish Emigration Distribution

It seemed like a good idea when it started, but I'm not so sure now. I have, however, learnt how to paste table into the blog, so that's not bad.

I saw a hit list compiled by a criminal anti-fascist group and, noticing the number of non-Polish addresses on the Polish list (136 out of 480), I thought it would be interesting to see their destination distribution. The list may not be random or widely representative and some of the places may not be the real locations/spelt correctly. (I liked 'Krapowice' on the Polish list.)

The top scoring destinations were:

London
18
Co. Cork
11
Dublin
9
Bristol
4
Co. Meath
3
Des Plaines
3
Galway
3
Leicester
3
Paisley
3

Ireland 26, England 25, Scotland and USA 3.

With 2 each came the next 14 preferred destination:


Athlone
Huntingdon
Bournemouth
Ipswich
Bradford
Kirckaldy
Co. Westmeath
Leyburn
Co. Tipper Cashel
Peterborough
Hastings
Ripon
Hemel Hempstead
Thetford

Whilst the 51 runners up were:

Aberdeen Edinburgh Newcastle under Lyme
Armees Egilsstadir Nottingham
Bad Sobernheim Egilsstodum Oxford
Beckenham Evje Pontypridd
Bedord Hamburg Quincy
Braunschweig Hetzerath Rasharkin
Bruxelles Jersey Redhill
Bury St Edmunds Laitila Riverside
Buxton Langenhagen Romford
Carlow Laudun Schenefeld
Chicago Limerick Southport
Clonmel Lydney St. Marys
Co. Kildare Masham St. Leonards on Sea
Co. Louth Meckenheim Staines
Co. Roscomm Nailsea Stamford
Dresden Nesoddtangen Sutton
Dungannon Newbridge Trenton


There's lots of hard data in a Migration Information Source article from 2010. This shows temporary stay destinations in 2008, with the EU lead countries being the UK (650 thousand), Germany (490K) and Ireland (190K). This illustration shows remittances from Polish workers to Poland by country of residence:


To assess the volume of movement to the EU countries, assume that the US level of money sent home has remained roughly stable. You'll have to read the article to assess the reliability of the assumption. If you do this, the increased movement to the UK and Ireland, rather than Germany, is clear (taking into account the article's suggestion that the 2009 fall in the proportion of receipts from the UK and Ireland reflected the economic situation of Poles living there). This corresponds to their predominance in the list I complied at the beginning of this post: I wondered why Germany was not more important. Is this co-incidence?

No comments: