7% of people in Barnet identified as English only when the census took place last year, down from 36% in 2011 By Sonja Tutty, Data Reporter
Across England and Wales, the proportion of people identifying as English dropped from 58% 10 years ago to just 15% last year
Fewer residents in Barnet identify as English than a decade ago as more opt for a British identity, new census figures show.
Jon Wroth-Smith, census deputy director, said the recent data highlights that we are living in an “increasingly multi-cultural society” across England and Wales, with fewer people saying they belong to a particular nation.
And 59% selected British only in the recent survey while 32% chose the identity a decade ago.
Overall, about 78% of people in Barnet chose any UK identity in 2021, in line with the proportion in 2011.
Across England and Wales, 90% usual residents identified with at least one UK national identity – a slight decrease from 92% in 2011.
The proportion of people identifying as English only saw the sharpest fall, from 58% selecting the national identity 10 years ago to just 15% last year.
People opting for Welsh only also fell slightly, from 3.7% of the population 10 years ago to 3.2% last year.
Nationally, 55% said they identified as British – leaping from 19% in the previous census.
The census also revealed shifts in ethnicities across England and Wales with the proportion of people identifying as white falling to 82% last year from 86% in 2011.
And 74% of the total population in identified their ethnic group as white English, Welsh, Scottish, Northern Irish or British in the recent survey – down from 81% a decade prior.
About 58% of people identified as white in Barnet in 2021, down from 64% in the previous census.
Additionally, 36% identified as white English, Welsh, Scottish, Northern Irish or British – falling from 45% in the previous census.
Jon Wroth-Smith said: “The percentage of people identifying their ethnic group as ‘White: English, Welsh, Scottish, Northern Irish or British’, continues to decrease.
“Whilst this remains the most common response to the ethnic group question, the number of people identifying with another ethnic group continues to increase.”
In Barnet 74,972 residents (19%) identified as Asian or Asian British and 30,651 (8%) selected black or black British as their ethnicity. A further 20,889 (5%) said they were mixed ethnicity.
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