England Will Need to Build Over 100K Houses Per Year to Keep Up with Mass Migration
Over 100,000 homes will need to be built in England every year as a result of mass migration, analysis from the Migration Watch UK think tank has found.
A new home will need to be built every five minutes until the early 2040s as a result of immigration, representing 57 per cent of all new homes, or 107,400 homes per year, according to an analysis conducted of Office for National Statistics (ONS) figures by Migration Watch.
The think tank found that the impact of foreign arrivals in the country will require nearly 2.7 million homes to be built in the country by the year 2043, which they noted would be equivalent to nine cities the size of Glasgow.
The report said that even if migration fell to 2013 levels, when between 180,000 and 190,000 people were immigrating, then immigration would still account for nearly half of the total number of houses by the 2040s, or 67,800 per year.
Of course, Boris Johnson’s uncapped points-based immigration system will in fact likely lead to a dramatic increase in immigration to the United Kingdom.
A study in July from the UK Centre of Ecology and Hydrology (UKCEH) found that nearly 835,000 acres of land have been concreted over in Britain.
Satellite images showed that between the years 1990 and 2015, some 1,303 square miles (3,376 square kilometres) of land was overtaken by urban sprawl in the country.
During the same time period, the population of Britain rose from 57 million in 1990 to around 65.6 million in 2016. The massive jump in population was driven almost entirely by mass migration, with 90 per cent of population growth in England between 2005 and 2014 coming as a result of immigration.