1. LIVERPOOL
Liverpool’s unique culture is a direct outcome of its diverse communities
Before the first world war, Liverpool’s global seaport had
made the city the most ethnically diverse and cosmopolitan
UK city outside London
The city’s economic and population decline post 1945 meant
that relatively few of the “new Commonwealth” migrants
settled here compared with other parts of the UK
by the 2001 Census, Liverpool was numerically one of the
least ethnically diverse city’s in the UK,
This has started to change along with the city’s improved
economic fortunes over the past decade and recent
population analysis shows that Liverpool’s recent population
stabilisation is due to the increase in Liverpool’s non- white
British population, most notably Eastern European migrants.
But diversity is not about quantity! – it is about the breadth of
difference and how we value and respect these differences –
Current City profile
Total population 465,700 (2011 ONS mid-year estimates)
13.7% of the population are Non ‘White British’ (i.e. White Irish, White Other. Mixed,
Asian, Asian British, Black, black British, Chinese or other ethnic group) – (Source:
ONS 2009).
Liverpool’s BME population increased by an estimated 23,800 (65.0%) between
2001-09. Without this increase the city’s population would have continued to
decline. Over the same period, the city’s white British population fell by 5.8%
(23,400)
Almost half (44.5%) of the growth in Liverpool’s BME population between 2001-2009
occurred in the “White Other” group. This group trebled in size between 2001 and
2009 (an increase of 10,600 residents). The majority of this group are migrants from
Eastern Europe (Poland, the Czech Republic, Slovakia, Romania etc. and countries
such as the Yemen. Other population groups which increased markedly were:
Indians (4,700 additional Liverpool residents)
Pakistanis (2,100 residents)