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Ian Gordon Geography Department, LSE London and Spatial Economics Research Centres

Densification, Development and/or Displacement: accommodating migrant-induced population growth in London (and its extended region). Ian Gordon Geography Department, LSE London and Spatial Economics Research Centres London School of Economics

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Ian Gordon Geography Department, LSE London and Spatial Economics Research Centres

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  1. Densification, Development and/or Displacement: accommodating migrant-induced population growth in London (and its extended region) Ian Gordon Geography Department, LSE London and Spatial Economics Research Centres London School of Economics LSE London/HEIF5 conference on How London is being transformed by migration , March 24th 2014

  2. Introduction • London Mayoral Plans all avoid recognition of • driving role of international migration in London’s population turnaround; and • high degree of integration of housing / labour markets across London metro region and beyond • But size of gap between estimated housing need and (half) credible supply growth makes crucial to: • look much more closely at how immigrant-induced growth has been accommodated so far; • with realistic view of the displacement effects along extended chains of interaction in space-constrained region ; • and of the dynamic effects of migrant settlement - as economic position and housing aspirations change

  3. The Back Story • For 50 years GL population contracted because • rising prosperity increased demands for personal space • beyond the capacity of available land inside the ‘green dam’ • Situation changed in late 1980s and then late 1990s: • partly cumulative effect of enlarged YUPpy cohorts of singles / graduates with strong taste for city life • but clearly tied to upswings in international migration, reflecting strong external stimuli + weak border control • Migrant impact on London population is not 1 for 1 • clear indications of displacement in inter-regional movement • graphs and Hatton/Tani (2005) work suggest more like 50% • but important questions about; • how 50% gets fitted in – generating development, or just crowding ? • Is this a temporary accommodation – or sustainable ?

  4. London’s ‘Mirror Image’ Migration Trends

  5. Evidence from Inter-Censal Change • Investigated 2001-11 changes in: • numbers of (occupied) rooms + average persons per room • 5 population groups: • UK born • Migrants since 2001 – from Poor countries & Rich countries • Earlier migrants – from Poor/Rich countries • Across the Greater South East - at 2 spatial scales: • neighbourhoods (LSOA), where relations with densification (or reverse?) expected to be compositional (shifting mixes) • Local (sub-) Housing Market Areas (Coombes’ 73 ‘lower’ units) where demand pressure may exert more general effects • on occupation density and on supply of dwelling space (rooms) • Maps suggest some possibly important links

  6. In Broad Terms – Over the Decade • Population grew right across GSE • but fastest towards the core (IL) • Reflecting growth in foreign-born • Primarily from poor countries – particularly in OL where UK born numbers fell significantly • But also from rich countries – principally in IL • There was a dispersal of earlier arrivals from both groups – though PoorC group going further (including beyond GSE) • Room numbers also grew across the GSE • Especially in IL – though patchy even there • And not particularly in immigrant areas • But in London population per room also grew • accommodating c40% of growth • Notably in/near areas of new poor country arrival

  7. Statistical Evidence on ... Densification • Analyses of 2001-11 change across LSOAs point to: • significant effect of job accessibility on densification • with zero pop growth, prediction is of + 5.8% in IL vs. 2.9% in outer RGSE • but strongest effect from (local) rate of PoorC arrivals • 55% absorbed by denser occupancy - cf. 10% for UK born • much weaker effect from change among earlier arrivals (30%) • indicative of substantial convergence in housing expectations • generally weaker among RichC arrivals – but strikingly so in IL • the main concentration, but quite atypical – maybe no net effect on densities • though among longer stayers impact seems close to that for PoorC group • additional to these local (compositional effects) there is evidence (from LHMA pop. change) of a demand pressure effect • about 24% for growth from all sources • except for RichC arrivals in IL (zero impact at LHMA scale) • but for PoorC arrivals densification absorbed c.80% of additional numbers • Adding 12.9% to IL room occ. density vs 3.4% in outer RGSE

  8. ... Development Effects • Similar analyses of change in room numbers – with controls for land availability, as well as job access: • suggest no significant effect from new migrants at LHMA level – where we might expect to find it • at neighbourhood level there is apparent evidence of positive (local) effects on the supply of rooms (equivalent to 20% of RichC arrivals and 7% for PoorC arrivals) • but this could only represent a local diversion of development activity • not a net contribution to accommodation of growth at the sub-regional scale

  9. ... Displacement • Time Series analyses for GL and for the rest of the GSE (1981-2011) show: • Strong effects of state of (UK) housing demand (for GL partic?) and some of overall GSE conditions (U/E and house prices) – but also • International migrational gains into London appear to be 40% displaced into other areas (after 2 years) • though primarily beyond the GSE: i.e. the chain of displacements stretches right through the GSE, ending up outside • Tho maybe still within Peter Hall’s original larger version of this super-region. • No such evidence of displacement by RGSE immigration • consistent with assumption that it reflects the incidence of housing market constraints, rather than labour market processes (or ‘white flight’?) • Tho’ findings for densification / development suggest rich country migration must generate more displacement – there is no indication of this at the regional (GL) scale (or of the reverse)

  10. Conclusions • Accommodating migrants involves some combination of : (a) induced additions to local room stock; (b) denser occupation of those rooms; and (c) displacement elsewhere • Impacts in a metro region such as London’s are greatly complicated, however, because: • displacement occurs at many scales – with knock-on effects across them; • different groups of migrants occupy substantially different HM positions; and • these change markedly over time. • There is much still to be sorted out about processes/impacts operating in London over the past 25 years - and the next • But it is clear that: • the dense (self-)housing of PoorCountry migrants has been key to location of population growth within London; • they will be demanding much more space (somewhere) soon – though despite UKBA et al others may well come to take their place; and that • the process has ramifications right across southern England which need more careful (and open) examination .

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