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Opinion

It’s not always bad for a community to decline

You will never stop Jews moving away from an area but you can make the most of its future

October 7, 2021 17:32
Stamford Hill E981T6
E981T6 Orthodox Jews crossing the road in Stamford Hill, Hackney, London, UK
2 min read

The UK Jewish population has been stable at around the 300,000 mark for about 20 years now. That’s pretty remarkable given that it fell by about a third between 1950 and 2000. But that stability masks considerable turbulence at the local level. Some areas are experiencing tremendous Jewish population growth, while others are facing relentless decline.

Growth can be seen particularly in charedi areas like Stamford Hill, Broughton Park and Gateshead. Decline can be seen in several regional communities, such as Liverpool, Brighton and Glasgow, as well as in certain parts of London, including Redbridge and Brent.

Jewish population decline is always challenging for local leaders to manage. There is often an admirable tendency to fight it tooth and nail, working harder to attract Jews into the area, to improve local community services and to invest in new ones. But at a certain point, the chances of stopping the decline, never mind reversing it, cease to be realistic. Demographic realities simply become too powerful.

To predict the future of a community, its age structure matters more than its size. Growing communities are overwhelmingly comprised of young people. Over half of all Jews living in Stamford Hill today are aged under 18, while just six per cent are aged 65 or above. Compare that with Liverpool, where only about 10 per cent are under 18 and a third are 65-plus. Demographically, the future of the former community looks assured; the future of the latter, much less so. Jewish demographers use different terms to describe different age structures. The type found in Stamford Hill is known as “traditional”. That found in Liverpool is categorised as “ageing”. But things can become even more ominous than the “ageing” state. An area in which the kinds of proportions found in Stamford Hill are seen entirely in reverse is labelled “terminal”. Without significant immigration into an “ageing” population, it will inevitably acquire the “terminal” label eventually.