Fewer residents in Bucks identify as English with more opting for British

Census shows we are living in an "increasingly multi-cultural society"
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Fewer residents in Buckinghamshire 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.

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The figures from the Office for National Statistics show 16% of people in Buckinghamshire identified as English only when the census took place last year, down from 59% in 2011.

The Union Flag. Photo: Joel Ryan/PAThe Union Flag. Photo: Joel Ryan/PA
The Union Flag. Photo: Joel Ryan/PA

And 59% selected British only in the recent survey while 21% chose the identity a decade ago.

Overall, about 92% of people in Buckinghamshire chose any UK identity in 2021, down slightly from 93% in 2011.

Across England and Wales, 90% usual residents identified with at least one UK national identity – a slight decrease from 92% in 2011.

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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.

Welsh only also fell 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.

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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 80% of people identified as white in Buckinghamshire in 2021, down from 86% previously.

Additionally, 73% identified as white English, Welsh, Scottish, Northern Irish or British – falling from 81% in the previous census.

Mr Wroth-Smith said: "The percentage of people identifying their ethnic group as 'White: English, Welsh, Scottish, Northern Irish or British', continues to decrease.

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"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 Bucks 68,318 residents (12%) identified as Asian or Asian British and 14,269 (3%) selected black or black British as their ethnicity. A further 19,570 (4%) said they were mixed ethnicity.