New figures released by the UK's Office for National Statistics show that 24% of 
babies born in the UK last 
year (2011) were born to women who were born outside the UK.
The ONS 
said that 'the increase in the proportion of foreign births to non-UK born 
mothers living in the UK illustrates how the demographic make-up of the UK is 
changing.' It added that understanding the patterns of childbearing among 
migrant populations was 'essential for planning services such as maternity 
provision and schools'.
The figures show that in London, where most 
immigrants live, 57% of children were born to non-UK born mothers. The five 
countries from where the most mothers came were 
• Poland, (from where 23,000 
mothers came)
• Pakistan (19,000)
• India (15,500)
• Bangladesh 
(8,500)
• Nigeria (8,000)
• Germany (7,000 – though these were 
predominantly born in Germany to UK service personal stationed in military bases 
there)
The ONS found that the number of births to UK born mothers remained 
virtually static between 2007 and 2011. In 2007, there were 603,000 births to 
UK-born mothers compared to 612,000 in 2011.
However, the number of 
children born to non-UK born mothers rose by 16% from 169,000 to 196,000. Part 
of this is explained by the numbers of UK-born and non-UK born women living in 
the UK. Between 2007 and 2011 there has been a 24% rise in the number of women 
of child-bearing age living in the UK whereas the number of such UK born women 
has actually fallen by 5%.
The survey found that fertility rates are 
much higher among non-UK born than among UK-born populations. The general 
fertility rate measures the annual number of live births per 1,000 women of 
childbearing age (often taken to be from 15 to 49 years old. That figure is 60 
for UK born women. The figure is nearly 150 for Pakistani-born women and nearly 
140 for Nigerian born women. For Bangladeshi-born women the figure is around 
110, for Indian-born women around 95 and for Polish-born women around 
90.
The survey found that, on average, foreign born mothers have 2.28 
children each while UK born mothers have only 1.89 children.
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