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EU Demographics Shift: New Data On Foreign-Born And Third-Country Residents As Of January 2025

Overview Of European Demographic Trends

Recent Eurostat figures show notable changes in the demographic structure of the European Union as of January 1, 2025. Around 46.7 million residents, or 10.4% of the EU’s total population of 450.6 million, were born outside the bloc. This represents an increase of 1.9 million compared with the previous year and reflects the continued evolution of population patterns across Europe.

Foreign-Born Populations: Absolute And Relative Insights

In absolute numbers, foreign-born residents are most concentrated in Germany, France, Spain and Italy, with 17.2 million, 9.6 million, 9.5 million and 6.9 million people respectively. When measured as a share of national populations, Luxembourg ranks highest, with 51.5% of its permanent residents born abroad. Malta follows with 32.0%, Cyprus with 27.6%, Ireland with 23.3%, Austria with 22.5%, Sweden with 20.8% and Germany with 20.5%.

At the lower end of the scale, Poland reports 2.6%, Romania 3.6%, Bulgaria 3.8% and Slovakia 4.0% of residents born outside the EU. These differences illustrate varying migration flows as well as distinct national approaches to demographic and integration policy.

Third-Country Nationals And Intra-EU Mobility

As of January 1, 2025, approximately 30.6 million third-country nationals were living in the EU, accounting for 6.8% of the total population. This marks an annual increase of 1.6 million. In addition, about 14.1 million residents were citizens of another EU member state, up by 0.1 million year over year.

Germany, Spain, France and Italy host the largest numbers of third-country nationals, with 12.4 million, 6.9 million, 6.5 million and 5.4 million people respectively. Together, these four countries represent 69.7% of all third-country nationals in the EU while accounting for 57.8% of the bloc’s overall population.

Comparative Analysis Of National And Regional Statistics

In proportional terms, Luxembourg again leads, with third-country nationals making up 47.0% of its population. Malta reports 29.4% and Cyprus 24.8%. By contrast, Poland and Slovakia each record 1.2%, Romania 1.6%, Bulgaria 2.3% and Hungary 2.7%.

Looking at EU citizens residing in another member state, Luxembourg also ranks first at 35.8%, followed by Cyprus at 10.1% and Austria at 10.0%. Several countries show minimal intra-EU mobility, including Poland and Lithuania at 0.1%, Latvia at 0.2%, Romania at 0.3%, Bulgaria at 0.5%, Croatia at 0.6%, Slovakia at 0.7% and Hungary at 0.9%. In Estonia and Latvia, figures are influenced by a sizable population of recognized non-citizens, primarily former Soviet Union nationals who reside permanently without obtaining additional citizenship.

Conclusion: Navigating A Changing Demographic Landscape

These demographic developments highlight both opportunities and policy challenges for the European Union. Rising numbers of foreign-born residents and third-country nationals are prompting renewed attention to integration strategies, labor markets and long-term population planning as member states seek to balance economic growth with social stability.

ECB Wage Tracker Signals Stable Wage Pressures And Moderate Growth Through 2026

The European Central Bank has published an updated wage tracker showing that negotiated wage pressures remain stable. Based on agreements signed through the end of May 2026, negotiated wage growth is expected to reach around 2.6% by December.

Quarterly And Yearly Dynamics

The headline indicator, which smooths one-off payments to reflect quarterly and monthly developments, points to wage growth of 3.2% in 2025 and 2.3% in 2026. For 2026, average growth is estimated at 1.8% in the first quarter and 2.1% in the second quarter before accelerating to 2.6% in the final two quarters of the year.

Mechanical Effects And Forecast Nuances

According to the ECB, annual growth figures are still influenced by one-off payments made in 2024 but not repeated in 2025. Their impact is expected to gradually fade during 2026. Excluding the smoothing effect, the tracker points to negotiated wage growth of 3.0% in 2025 and 2.6% in 2026. Removing one-off payments altogether results in a decline from 3.8% in 2025 to 2.6% in 2026, indicating slower growth in base wages.

Employee Coverage And Forward-Looking Projections

Coverage data currently available for 2026 shows that employees included in the tracker accounted for 46.4% in the first quarter. That share falls to 44.8% in the second quarter, 41.1% in the third quarter, and 40.4% in the final quarter of the year. The current release extends to December 2026. Additional collective agreements included in the July 2026 update are expected to expand the horizon to the first quarter of 2027.

Caveats And Broader Context

The ECB said the tracker is subject to revision and should not be viewed as a formal forecast. Instead, it reflects information available from active collective bargaining agreements. For a broader picture of wage developments across the euro area, the central bank referred to the June 2026 Eurosystem Staff Macroeconomic Projections, which forecast compensation growth per employee of 3.2% in 2026.

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