2. Four per cent of families entirely Swedish-speaking
In 87 per cent of all families the only parent or both parents are Finnish-speaking. Correspondingly, four per cent of families are entirely Swedish-speaking (3.8%). Families where one spouse is Swedish-speaking and the other Finnish-speaking account for three per cent of all families. Combinations of Finnish and Swedish-speakers with other languages can be found in three per cent of all families. Families where both spouses or the only parent are foreign-language speakers number 42,000, which equals to three per cent of all families.
In clearly more cases, Swedish-speaking men have Finnish-speaking spouses than Swedish-speaking women Finnish-speaking spouses. The number of purely Swedish-speaking couples is only 4,700 higher than that of Finnish and Swedish-speaking couples.
Altogether, 24,600 of Finnish or Swedish-speaking men are married to or cohabiting with a foreign-language speaking woman. The corresponding figure for women is 19,800. Marriages with foreign-language speakers have increased by 2,500.
Table 4. Families speaking Finnish, Swedish or other language in 1990–2011
Man/woman speaking Finnish/other language | Year | |||||
1990 | 1995 | 2000 | 2005 | 2010 | 2011 | |
Finnish speaking man and finnish speaking woman | 1 088 742 | 1 081 473 | 1 089 232 | 1 105 316 | 1 114 828 | 1 115 178 |
Finnish speaking man and swedish speaking woman | 16 544 | 16 876 | 17 394 | 17 904 | 18 337 | 18 389 |
Finnish speaking woman and swedish speaking man | 22 734 | 22 822 | 23 445 | 24 218 | 24 552 | 24 658 |
Finnish speaking man and foreign speaking woman | 4 020 | 7 636 | 11 094 | 16 062 | 21 772 | 23 102 |
Finnish speaking woman and foreign speaking man | 5 951 | 8 679 | 10 236 | 13 181 | 17 441 | 18 450 |
Finnish speaking mother/father | 162 209 | 174 554 | 174 861 | 166 741 | 161 302 | 160 179 |
Swedish speaking man and swedish speaking woman | 53 348 | 50 845 | 49 198 | 48 190 | 47 881 | 47 784 |
Swedish speaking man and foreign speaking woman | 300 | 483 | 655 | 982 | 1 434 | 1 521 |
Swedish speaking woman and foreign speaking man | 410 | 597 | 678 | 943 | 1 261 | 1 319 |
Swedish speaking mother/father | 8 489 | 8 871 | 8 609 | 8 147 | 7 953 | 7 877 |
Foreign speaking man and foreign speaking woman | 1 832 | 7 425 | 11 668 | 16 944 | 27 638 | 30 439 |
Foreign speaking mother/father | 762 | 2 709 | 4 893 | 7 374 | 10 674 | 11 674 |
2.1 Sixteen per cent of Russian-speaking families are one-parent families
The largest foreign-language group in Finland is made up of Russian-speakers. At the end of 2011, there were 12,000 such Russian-speaking families in Finland in which the native language of the only parent or both parents was Russian. The number of families where either one of the spouses is Russian-speaking is slightly lower at 11,000. The number of Russian-speaking families is some 1,300 higher than in the year before.
The number of Russian-speaking one-parent families is 3,700, which is 16 per cent of all Russian-speaking families. The number has grown by around one hundred from the previous year. Among Russian-speakers, one-parent families are slightly more common that one-parent families are on the level of the whole country (12%). Of Russian-speaking one-parent families 96 per cent are formed by mothers and children, while this is so for 86 per cent of all families.
The most common language combination among the Russian-speaking families is one where the husband and the wife speak Russian (8,300). During 2011, the number of such couples grew by around 600.
Families of a Finnish-speaking man and a Russian-speaking wife are almost equally widespread (7,700). In 1990 there were only 300 Russian-speaking couples in Finland, but today their number has already gone up to close on 8,300. It is still rare for a Finnish-speaking woman to have a Russian-speaking spouse. However, their number (1,300) has more than quadrupled from 1990.
2.2 Number of families of foreign citizens growing
In only five per cent (68,800 families) of all families in Finland at least one of the spouses or the only parent is a foreign citizen. There were only 12,500 such families in Finland in 1990 and as many as 36,000 in 2000. In the past year the number of such families has increased by 4,700. The number of families in which both the husband and wife are foreign nationals grew the most.
In the early 1990s, the most common combination in families of foreign citizens was one where the wife was a Finnish citizen and the husband a foreign citizen. The number of foreign families in which the wife was a foreign national and the husband a Finnish national was the largest at the beginning of the 2000s. The most common combination among the foreign families is still one of Finnish man and foreign wife, and the second most common is one where the man is foreign and the wife Finnish (Figure 3). No distinction is made between married and cohabiting couples in these statistics.
Entirely foreign families, i.e. families where the only parent or both spouses are foreign citizens, total 27,700. The largest group among them are families of Russian citizens. At the end of 2011, there were 5,600 families in Finland in which both spouses or the only parent were Russian citizens. The number of families of Russian citizens grew by around 200 during 2011.
There were 5,700 entirely Estonian families of which one-third were families consisting of mother and children only. The number of Estonian families has increased by 900 from the year before.
Families of two Somali citizens or with one Somali parent numbered around 1,000. The number of these families grew by around one hundred from the previous year. About one-half of the families of Somali citizens are families of mother and children only. Many of the Somali families that moved to Finland in the past have already lived in the country long enough to have been granted Finnish citizenship. On the basis of persons' mother tongue, there are 2,000 families where both spouses or one parent were originally Somali citizens.
Figure 3. Families of foreign citizens in 1990, 2001 and 2011
2.3 Men have more often a spouse born abroad than women
An examination of countries of birth gives the best picture of the foreign spouses of Finns. However, it should be borne in mind that some originally Finnish citizens are also born abroad. Finnish-born men have 34,300 foreign-born spouses. The number has grown by 1,500 from the year before.
Finnish-born women have 29,600 foreign-born spouses, the figure being up by 1,200. Today, Finnish men have more often spouses with foreign background than Finnish women have.
The foreign-born spouses of Finnish men and women come from a variety of countries. The men's spouses have mainly been born in the neighbouring countries in west, east and south alike. Those born in the area of the former Soviet Union cannot be separated into Russians or Estonians (or those born in other republics of the former Soviet Union), because even the Estonians' country of birth is mostly the Soviet Union and a large number of the spouses from Estonia had already moved to Finland before the collapse of the Soviet Union. Finnish men have 11,000 spouses who were born in the former Soviet Union, Russia or Estonia, and 8,300 spouses who were born in Sweden. Wives born in Thailand numbered 3,600, and their number has increased by 300 from the year before. Next come spouses born in Germany, China, the Philippines, the USA, Poland and Great Britain.
Women's foreign-born spouses come from a larger variety of countries than men's spouses. After the 8,400 Swedish-born spouses, the second largest group of foreign-born spouses of women were also those born in the areas of the former Soviet Union. Husbands born in the former Soviet Union, Russia and Estonia number 2,400, which is 159 more than in the year before. The next most frequent countries of birth of Finnish women' foreign spouses are Great Britain, Germany, Turkey and the USA. The total number of countries in which spouses of at least 100 Finnish women were born is 44. The corresponding number for Finnish men is 34.
Figure 4A. Foreign-born spouses of Finnish-born men by country of birth in 2011
Figure 4B. Foreign-born spouses of Finnish-born women by country of birth in 2011
Source: Population and Cause of Death Statistics, Statistics Finland
Inquiries: Marjut Pietiläinen 09 1734 2798, Timo Nikander 09 1734 3250, vaesto.tilasto@stat.fi
Director in charge: Jari Tarkoma
Updated 9.11.2012
Official Statistics of Finland (OSF):
Families [e-publication].
ISSN=1798-3231. Annual Review 2011,
2. Four per cent of families entirely Swedish-speaking
. Helsinki: Statistics Finland [referred: 21.11.2024].
Access method: http://www.stat.fi/til/perh/2011/02/perh_2011_02_2012-11-09_kat_002_en.html