OnLondon

Will absent Londoners come back to the Covid capital? And when?

Screenshot 2021 03 14 at 17.03.32

Screenshot 2021 03 14 at 17.03.32

There’s been a lot of interest in how London’s population size has been affected by the pandemic and how long those affects might last. An assessment produced last autumn concluded that the number of Londoners will keep on increasing over the next 30 years, with Covid impacts proving temporary.

But a subsequent one – which has received lots of media coverage – estimated that, as things stand, there might currently be a strikingly high 700,000 fewer people living in London than there were at this time last year, when the first lockdown was put in place. Has that really happened? If so, will those Londoners return?

The authors of the more recent study, Michael O’Connor and Jonathan Portes, wrote:

“Much of this may be temporary, if non-UK born people return to London after the pandemic; but it may not. Big shifts in population trends in London, driven by economic changes and events, are by no means historically unprecedented – Inner London’s population shrank by fully 20% in the 1970s, so the recent picture of sustained growth driven by international migration is relatively recent. If this has now reversed, the medium to long-term implications for London will be profound.”

Taking a cue from the above, we might be wise to conclude that we will have to wait and see. But there is, perhaps, a clue to at least part of what might happen in last week’s fascinating London polling by Redfield & Wilton Strategies.

Along with findings about mayoral election voting intentions and possible insights into why one candidate is so far ahead, the pollsters learned which of their representative sample of Londoners were out of town when responding to the poll. A noteworthy 15 percent – nearly 250 people – said they were. Redfield & Wilton asked those people when they expected to return to London. Here’s a summary of the replies:

As with the very different sorts of study mentioned above, we ought to exercise caution about drawing big, fixed conclusions from this polling, which was of a fairly small sub-sample. Even so, it may serve as a warning that, as in other scenarios so often before, reports of a mass exodus from London may turn out to be exaggerated. We shall see.

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