د . إAEDSRر . س

Over 100,000 Foreigners Now Living In Malta As Island’s Population Just Keeps Ballooning

Article Featured Image

Malta has truly become a cosmopolitan country, with data compiled by Lovin Malta showing there are now almost a fourth as many foreigners as there are Maltese people living here.

There are now at least 100,000 foreigners living on the islands, with the high job creation rate and shortage of unemployed Maltese people forcing several businesses to look overseas for their labour.

This is how we reached our figures

20170603 063354

The electoral register shed light on how many EU nationals live in Malta

The Electoral Commission recently published the electoral register ahead of the upcoming European Parliament and local council elections.

It shows that 433,581 people are eligible to vote in the local council election and 371,625 people eligible to vote in the European Parliament election. That’s a disparity of 61,956 people, who are those EU nationals who opted against voting in the Maltese MEP elections.

While EU nationals who are residents of Malta are automatically entitled to vote in the local council elections, they must de-register in their home countries in order to vote in the Maltese MEP elections.

The vast majority of EU nationals opted against doing so, but 18,375 of them did sign up to vote for Malta’s six MEPs.

Therefore, 80,331 EU nationals live in Malta, not including those who are younger than the voting age of 16 and those who haven’t registered themselves as residents.

53347505 10158405364139741 7722205448492810240 O 2

Prime Minister Joseph Muscat has said his vision for Malta is that of a cosmopolitan society

Data given to Lovin Malta by the national employment agency JobsPlus last March shows there are a further 18,587 third-country nationals registered as working in Malta, which added to the number of EU nationals gives a combined total of 98,918.

This, of course, is a conservative figure, as it doesn’t include foreign children, EU nationals who haven’t registered as Maltese residents, third country nationals who are either unemployed or working without a work permit, and asylum seekers waiting for their documents.

It’s fair to predict that those will push the number of foreigners in Malta over the 100,000 mark. Recent figures show that Malta’s population stands at 475,701, which means foreigners make up at least 21% of that number.

And the population is not likely to stop growing any time soon, with Prime Minister Joseph Muscat repeatedly stating that the economy needs more people to keep on growing and that his vision for Malta is that of a cosmopolitan society.

Are you surprised by these figures?

READ NEXT: Foreign Workers Ring Warning Bells On Malta’s Rising Cost Of Living

Tim is interested in the rapid evolution of human society and is passionate about justice, human rights and cutting-edge political debates. You can follow him on Instagram or Twitter/X at @timdiacono or reach out to him at [email protected]

You may also love

View All