The census tells us about peoples lives, whether people were working, or living in a crowded home, if they were disabled or providing care for others, how much education they had received, and if they considered themselves in good or poor health. We found these outcomes varied considerably for ethnic groups across England and Wales. Ethnicity on the census is self-reported; people said which group they feel best describes their ethnic identity. The 19 ethnic groups in this article are tick-box selections within five main categories, which are part of peoples answers. Professional occupations were most common for people who identified as Indian and Chinese (these are people who selected Indian or Chinese within Asian, Asian British or Asian Welsh). Social rented housing was more common for people within Black, Black British, Black Welsh, Caribbean or African groups. Self-reported health is worse for people who said they were Gypsy or Irish Traveller (within the White ethnic category). These are just some of the findings that the census gives us on how people live in England and Wales across ethnic groups. |