FEWER babies are being born to foreign-born mothers in Reading, figures reveal.

Data from the Office for National Statistics shows that non-UK-born women living in the area gave birth to 1,065 children in 2018 – 48.9% of all deliveries.

READ ALSO: Fundraiser set up for family of Reading dad, Matt Newman, who died suddenly.

This was slightly down from 2017, when 49.2% of births were to mothers born abroad, but an increase on 42.3% a decade previously.

Across England and Wales, the rate of births to foreign-born mothers dropped from 28.4% to 28.2% last year – the first fall since 1990.

READ ALSO: Teenager missing from Reading.

Dr Marina Fernandez-Reino, a researcher at Oxford University’s Migration Observatory, said the distribution of the UK’s migrant population is very uneven.

In Brent in London, just over three-quarters of newborns had mothers born overseas, while in Copeland in the North West, the figure stood at just 3.0%.

Ms Fernandez-Reino said: “Foreign-born women in the UK are more likely to be of childbearing age than women born in the UK.

“The total fertility rates of UK-born and foreign-born women are 1.63 and 1.99 respectively, both below the replacement rate – which is the average number of children that needs to be born per woman to maintain a stable population without migration.

“In general, the fertility rate of foreign-born women tends to converge with that of UK-born women as their time spent in the UK increases.”

The most common region of origin for non-UK-born mothers giving birth in Reading was The Middle East and Asia – 427 births were to mothers born there.

This was followed by 366 from the EU, 158 from Africa, 67 from European nations outside the EU, and 47 from elsewhere.

Overall, 2,200 Reading women gave birth last year, a decrease from 2017.

Kathryn Littleboy, from the ONS, said: “Today’s figures show the first decrease in the proportion of live births in England and Wales to non-UK-born mothers since 1990, and the first decrease for non-UK-born fathers since our time series for them began in 2008.

"Poland and Pakistan remain the most common countries of birth for non-UK-born mothers and fathers respectively.

“Romania is now the second most common country of birth for non-UK-born fathers, and the third for non-UK-born mothers.”

Across England and Wales, there were around 657,000 births last year, although this includes a small number of mothers whose usual residence was elsewhere.

This was down from 679,000 the year before.