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The population loss due to net emigration was 35,502 (an estimated 40-50% of emigrants were ethnic non-Dutch). In 2007, there were 117,000 immigrants (including 7000 Germans, 6000 Poles, 5000 Bulgarians, 3000 Turks and 2000 Moroccans) and 123,000 emigrants.
The entire Northern Dutch cultural area is located in the Netherlands, its ethnically Dutch population is estimated to be just under 10,000,000. [ note 2 ] Northern Dutch culture has been less under French influence than the Southern Dutch culture area.
In 2022, the population was 74.8% ethnically Dutch, 8.3% other European, 2.4% Turkish, 2.4% Moroccan, 2.0% Indonesian, 2.0% Surinamese, and 8.1% others. [3] Some 150,000 to 200,000 people living in the Netherlands are expatriates , mostly concentrated in and around Amsterdam and The Hague , now constituting almost 10% of the population of these ...
The population of the Netherlands is getting increasingly older, due to longer life expectancy and a sub-replacement fertility rate. [1] [2] In Dutch this phenomenon is called Vergrijzing (English: Graying). [1] As of 1 January 2023 around 20% of the Dutch population is aged 65 or older. [3]
Dutch speakers, or Batavophones, are globally concentrated in the Netherlands, Belgium, and Suriname. Dutch is also spoken in minority areas through Europe and in many immigrant communities in all over the world. Afrikaans is a daughter language of Dutch, but is regarded as a separate language and will not be analyzed in this article.
] Afro-Dutch people, about 300,000 people, or 60%, are from these territories. Whilst only a minority of Black Dutch citizens are of Sub-Saharan African migrant background, there is a sizable population of Cape Verdean, Ghanaian, Nigerian, Somali, Angolan and other African communities of more recent immigrants. The majority of Afro-Dutch people ...
However, their educational levels were on average lower. While almost half of the native Dutch population (and Iranian origin pupils) had ever attended higher secondary education (HAVO) or pre-university education (VWO), only a fifth of the Turkish second generation had. [71] In 2015, the Turkish second generation percentage had increased to 27 ...
The 2001 UK Census recorded 40,438 Dutch-born people living in the UK. [13] The 2011 Census recorded 57,439 Dutch-born residents in England, 1,642 in Wales, [64] 4,117 in Scotland and 515 in Northern Ireland. [65] [66] The Office for National Statistics estimates that the figure for the whole of the UK was 68,000 in 2019. [67]