According to the answer to a question Cycling UK asked the Department for Transport, in 2018: Almost a third of people (30%) who held a driving licence also cycled. The 2011 Census data shows that: the total population of England and Wales was 56.1 million; 48.2 million people (86.0%) were from White ethnic groups, with 45.1 million of those identifying with the White British group (80.5% of the population) and 2.5 million with the Other White ethnic group (4.4%) they hadn’t given up driving). We’ve updated our poverty line calculator for 2018/19 and the results look stark. In 2018, 10% of people working in the UK were born outside of the EU. Over four-fifths (83%) of people aged 18 years+ who cycled held a driving licence and drove (i.e. One in six of Fingal residents was a non-Irish national with Polish, Romanian, UK and Lithuanian nationals combined accounting for 53.8 per cent of these.

Of the 27 EU countries, Spain had the most UK nationals with just under 310,000 migrants from the UK living there in 2015.

Polish Nationals: 122,515. There were 122,515 Polish nationals living in Ireland in April 2016, the largest non-Irish population group in 2016. The number of Polish people being born in the UK has increased from 75,000 to 521,000 in eight years. A lot of Poles have migrated into the UK over the years - according to Wikipedia, Poles are the second-largest overseas-born community in the UK after Indians.This isn't new (Polish Jews came to the UK in the late 19th century) but much of it has to do with Poland joining the … The population fell by less than 0.1 per cent between 2011 and 2016, the smallest percentage change of the top ten profiled nationalities.

Ireland was second with 255,000 and France third with 185,000. The share of EU born workers in the labour market increased from 2% in 2004, but remained broadly stable from 2016 to 2018, when it stood at 7% in 2018 (Figure 1). The tool allows you to see how much money a family has to live on if they are on the UK poverty line - which varies depending on family size and age – and shows how typical benefit levels compare. Donegal had the smallest proportion of non-Irish nationals (7.3%) in 2016 and over half of these were UK nationals with 5,860 persons.