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Hindus healthiest, Sikhs most likely to own homes in UK

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LONDON: Hindus living in the UK are among the healthiest and well qualified religious groups and Sikhs are most likely to own their homes, according to latest census data for England and Wales.

The UK’s Office for National Statistics (ONS) has been analysing census statistics to release informatio­n across various subcategor­ies for the country’s population based on the responses of the online census conducted in March 2021.

In its latest release entitled ‘Religion by housing, health, employment and education’ this week, the ONS finds that life outcomes for religious groups varied considerab­ly.

“In 2021, those who identified as ‘Hindu’ had the highest percentage of their population reporting either ‘very good’ or ‘good’ health (87.8 per cent), compared with 82.0 per cent of the overall population,” the ONS finds, adding that the Hindus also reported the “lowest prevalence of disability”.

“People who identified as ‘Hindu’ had the highest percentage with a ‘Level 4 or above’ [certificat­e-level] qualificat­ion (54.8 per cent), compared with the overall population (33.8 per cent),” it noted.

“People who identified as ‘Sikh’ were more likely to live in households that owned their home… 77.7 per cent of those who identified as ‘Sikh’ lived in households that owned their home,” the ONS said.The religion question is voluntary in the census and in 2021, 94 per cent of the overall population in England and Wales of 56 million chose to answer the question.

The ONS said that many of the life outcomes discussed in its analysis may be influenced by the differing age and sex profiles of religious groups.

“In 2021, people who identified as ‘Muslim’ were nearly four times more likely to live in overcrowde­d homes than the overall population of England and Wales,” the statistics show.

“In 2021, people who identified as ‘Muslim’ had the lowest percentage of people aged 16 to 64 years in employment (51.4 per cent compared with 70.9 per cent of the overall population); this resulted from the high percentage­s of people who were students or looking after home or family in this group,” it said.

The ONS pointed out that life outcomes for religious groups often overlap, as people in poor health or caring for others may be less able to work or gain education. Income, where people live, and cultural background, also have an influence on outcomes. The analysis reveals that those who identified as “Christian” had an older age profile and reported poorer health than the overall population.

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