If in 2020, foreigners represented 6.4 percent of the total
number of residents, in 2021 they became 6.8% (698,887 people), according to
the 2022 Annual Statistical Report of the Migration Observatory.
“At the end of the decade, the country reaches unprecedented
values of close to seven hundred thousand foreign residents, a number never
before reached in Portugal”, reads the document.
The reasons for foreigners entering the country remain
essentially associated with the study, family reunification, and retirement: in 2019
these three types of visas together represented 85.1 percent of the total
number of residence visas issued at consular posts (46.6 percent for study, 14
percent for retirees and 24.5 percent for family reunification).
The trend was repeated in 2020, “when they represented 88
percent of all visas (53.6 percent for study, 12.8 percent for retired people
and 21.6 percent for family reunification).
In 2021, they accounted for 82.4 percent of all residence
visas issued (46.5 percent for study, 21.5 percent for retirees, and 14.4
percent for family reunification).
Positive impact
However, as the director of the Observatory, Catarina Reis
Oliveira, author of the study, underlines, with Portugal in a situation of
marked demographic aging, “not all immigration profiles will be able to
alleviate the country’s demographic situation”, since retired foreigners “tend
to reinforce the relative importance of elderly residents” and, unlike the
immigrant population of working age and childbearing age, which the country has
traditionally received in recent decades, “do not mitigate the demographic
aging of the country”.
There are municipalities in Portugal where more than a third
of the resident population is foreign, reaching 41.2 percent in Vila do Bispo,
37.1 percent in Albufeira, and 35 percent in Lagos.
“The structure of the ten numerically most representative
foreign nationalities in Portugal underwent some changes in the reference years
of this report, namely associated with the increase in the number of nationals
from some European countries (Italy, France and the United Kingdom) and Asia
(India), and the decrease of some nationalities from the PALOP [Portuguese-speaking
African countries] and Eastern Europe”, reads the document.
Better sell the entire Portugal to foreigners and make the authentic Portugese into foreigners
Shame on those who propose to sell their beautiful country
By Miguel Da Costa from UK on 23 Dec 2022, 16:10
Here we go, shame foreigners for everything, selling country... And all of these comes from person who is residing in foreign country as a foreigner. If you don't want your country to be "sold out", come back. In the meantime someone needs to pay taxes and contribute to the budget of Portuguese state not the UK budget. So we are not stilling anything, we are just temporary residing in this country and during that time we pay taxes, buy goods, pay rents in this country. And sooner or later we will leave. So we don't still no one's country. At the end if you can't buy apartment or house in your country, complain to the government, or to the property owners who are putting the prices which are high even for people residing in Portugal. Or change the government. You have the power, you have the vote, we just reside here. But, nope, nothing ever change, except complaints about foreigners stilling country. And I guess us Europeans wouldn't be a huge problem, but those "loud Brazilians, Angolans..." they are kind whom you are afraid of stilling the country. Well what goes around, comes around....
By Vlad from Lisbon on 24 Dec 2022, 10:13
Vlad is correct of course. Miguel on the other hand....writing his outrage all the way from the UK. Funny, when British, French, Germans or Italians don't want foreigners, they're smeared as bigots and racists. But it's totally ok for the Portuguese, who do so, while RESIDING IN ANOTHER COUNTRY!
Oh and btw Miguel, I bet I pay more taxes here in Portugal, than you do in Britain.
Clownworld.
By Hart from Lisbon on 24 Dec 2022, 13:37
Miguel, you literally live in the UK; stop moaning about foreigners when you are yourself a foreigne. We pay our taxes, contribute to our community, and you just sit on the internet complaining while being a massive hypocrite. Grow up.
By Maria from Alentejo on 24 Dec 2022, 23:13
It's in the exact way as Vlad said: Miguel, is you have something to complain for, make a protest, go to streets, claim your rights, but in the right way, not blaming immigrants and whining on the IG profiles of Público.pt because "you're being invaded and losing identity". Thing is worst if you're out of Portugal as an immigrant!
By Edu from Lisbon on 25 Dec 2022, 15:55