A quarter of Ukrainians who move to Poland in the winter are residents of the western regions. Among those who went abroad, the least were residents of Kiev and residents of occupied Crimea.
The majority of Ukrainians coming to Poland this winter are from the Dnepropetrovsk region. These results were published by the analytical center of the international employment agency Gremi Personal.
Khmelnitsky, Ivano-Frankivsk, Lviv and Volyn regions were among the top 5 regions where the most Ukrainians lived in Poland. According to the survey, 9.82 percent of Ukrainians came from the Dnipropetrovsk region this winter, 6.8 percent from the Khmelnitsky region, 6.3 percent from the Ivano-Frankivsk region, 6.05 percent from the Lviv region and 5.79 from the Volyn region. Moved to Poland.
The least likely people to move to Poland in winter were residents of Kiev and Crimea, at less than 1%.
52.64 percent of the respondents lived in cities, 17.63 percent in towns and 29.72 percent in villages.
Ukrainians officially working in Poland by the end of 2023 – 750 thousand out of 1 million 125 thousand of all working foreigners.
According to the survey, 9.82 percent of Ukrainians moved from the Dnepropetrovsk region to Poland this winter. From the Khmelnitsky region – 6.8%, from the Ivano-Frankivsk region – 6.3%, from the Lviv region – 6.05%, from the Volyn region – 5.79.
“Historically, most Ukrainians worked in Poland from the western regions of the country. The outbreak of the war led to changes in this tradition, as many had to leave the eastern and southern regions for security reasons. But within two years the majority managed to organize their lives: to Ukraine “Those who return, those who go to other countries, that is, the geographical indicator is improving despite the war. Especially Ukrainians who want to work, stay in Poland.”
The 10 regions where the most Ukrainians live in Poland are as follows:
- Rivne region – 5.79%;
- Kharkiv region – 5.29%;
- Zhytomyr region – 5.29%;
- Vinnitsa region – 4.53%.
Focus I have previously written about what will happen to the country’s economy if Ukrainian refugees do not return to their homes.
Moreover Focus He told what Ukrainians abroad think about the “forced” return to their homeland.
Source: Focus
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