The provided table demonstrates the figures for the number of citizens from five different European countries namely Great Britain, Germany, Italy, Poland and Spain, showing the data on individuals settlement in each other’s nations in 2011.
Overall, there was a total number of people living among the countries of roughly 3300000 , with Germany and Britain taking the leading position, while the opposite was the true case for Poland. It is also apparent that Spanish was the smallest foreign community comparing to other surveyed groups, whereas Polish was recorded as the largest influx of immigrants in the same year.
It is clear that Germany was the most popular destinations for people from other countries to live, with the highest figures of 1198000 overseas populations. Italian and Polish expatriates accounted for more than two-thirds of the figures, at 556000 and 426000 respectively. This was followed by The United Kingdom, which was home to the second-largest number of foreign residents (1037000), most of whom were Polish, numbering 550000. Additionally, 861000 people from other nations chose to immigrate in Spain, with British holding the dominant figures (391000), approximately twice as much as that from both Germans and Italian.
In contrast, Italy and Poland were not in favor of foreigners, with a significantly fewer number of people. Particularly, Italy attracted just 196000 people from the listed nations, which notably comprised of 106000 Polish nationals. Poland, however, was the least popular among five countries with a noticeably minor figures, which was mostly immigrated by Germans and British, at 4400 and 760 in a respective order.
