- Methods and Projects
- Standards and Classifications
Standardised Methodological Report
Estadística de Migraciones y Cambios de Residencia
- 1Contact
- 1.1Contact organisation
National Statistics Institute of Spain
- 1.5Contact mail address
Avenida de Manoteras 50-52 - 28050 Madrid
- 1.1Contact organisation
- 2Metadata update
- 2.1Metadata last certified
25/04/2024
- 2.2Metadata last posted
20/12/2023
- 2.3Metadata last update
25/04/2024
- 2.1Metadata last certified
- 3Statistical presentation
- 3.1Data description
The purpose of the Migration and Changes of Residence Statistics is to provide, in each autonomous community, in each province and in each municipality, a quantitative measurement of the:
- External migrations: these are migratory flows from Spain abroad
- Internal migrations: these are migratory flows that occur in Spain. Depending on the geographical area of origin and destination of the movement, be it an autonomous community, a province, or a municipality, we will talk about inter-autonomous, inter-provincial or inter-municipal migration.
The migration series will be disaggregated by sex, age, year of birth, country of nationality, country of birth and origin and destination of migration, as well as year and quarter of movement.
- 3.2Classification system
- Clasificaciones utilizadas
Lists are used from the autonomous communities, provinces, municipalities and countries of nationality and birth, in accordance with the INE's standards.
- Clasificaciones utilizadas
- 3.3Sector coverage
Migratory movements that affect the population residing in Spain.
- 3.4Statistical concepts and definitions
- 3.5Statistical unit
Migration.
- 3.6Statistical population
Set of migratory movements (changes of habitual residence) that occurred during the reference period from Spain abroad or vice versa, which constitute external migration, and between geographical areas of Spain (municipalities, provinces or autonomous communities), which constitute internal migration.
- 3.7Reference area
The statistics cover the whole of the national territory, and are disseminated for the national total, for each of the autonomous communities and cities, provinces, municipalities and islands.
- 3.8Time coverage
Annually since 2021.
- 3.9Base period
2021
- 3.1Data description
- 4Unit of measure
- 4.1Unit of measure
- Number of immigrations of people residing abroad.
- Number of emigrations abroad by residents in Spain.
- Number of internal migrations (between municipalities, between provinces and between autonomous communities) of residents in Spain.
- 4.1Unit of measure
- 5Reference period
- 5.1Reference period
Data referring to the period: Annual A: 2022
- 5.1Reference period
- 6Institutional mandate
- 6.1Legal acts and other agreements
The compilation and dissemination of the data are governed by the Statistical Law No. 12/1989 "Public Statistical Function" of May 9, 1989, and Law No. 4/1990 of June 29 on “National Budget of State for the year 1990" amended by Law No. 13/1996 "Fiscal, administrative and social measures" of December 30, 1996, makes compulsory all statistics included in the National Statistics Plan. The National Statistical Plan 2009-2012 was approved by the Royal Decree 1663/2008. It contains the statistics that must be developed in the four year period by the State General Administration's services or any other entity dependent on it. All statistics included in the National Statistics Plan are statistics for state purposes and are obligatory. The National Statistics Plan 2021-2024, approved by Royal Decree 1110/2020, of 15 December, is the Plan currently implemented. This statistical operation has governmental purposes, and it is included in the National Statistics Plan 2021-2024. (Statistics of the State Administration).
Regulation 862/2007 of the European Parliament and of the Council on Community Statistics on Migration and International Protection.
The Spanish version of this European Union regulation is accessible at: www.ine.es/normativa/leyes/UE/minine.htm#30277
- 6.2Data sharing
The exchanges of information needed to elaborate statistics between the INE and the rest of the State statistical offices (Ministerial Departments, independent bodies and administrative bodies depending on the State General Administration), or between these offices and the Autonomic statistical offices, are regulated in the LFEP (Law of the Public Statistic Function). This law also regulates the mechanisms of statistical coordination, and concludes cooperation agreements between the different offices when necessary.
The results of the Migrations and Changes of Residence Statistics are transmitted internationally as official figures of migrations from Spain for all purposes.
The exchange of data between the INE and the other statistical services of the State (ministerial departments, autonomous bodies and public entities of the State Administration), as well as between these and the statistical services of the Autonomous Communities for the development of the statistics that have been entrusted to them, are regulated in the LFEP. The LFEP also establishes the statistical coordination mechanisms between administrations, as well as the conclusion of collaboration agreements when deemed appropriate.
- 6.1Legal acts and other agreements
- 7Confidentiality
- 7.1Confidentiality - policy
The Statistical Law No. 12/1989 specifies that the INE cannot publish, or make otherwise available, individual data or statistics that would enable the identification of data for any individual person or entity. Regulation (EC) No 223/2009 on European statistics stipulates the need to establish common principles and guidelines ensuring the confidentiality of data used for the production of European statistics and the access to those confidential data with due account for technical developments and the requirements of users in a democratic society
- 7.2Confidentiality - data treatment
INE provides information on the protection of confidentiality at all stages of the statistical process: INE questionnaires for the operations in the national statistical plan include a legal clause protecting data under statistical confidentiality. Notices prior to data collection announcing a statistical operation notify respondents that data are subject to statistical confidentiality at all stages. For data processing, INE employees have available the INE data protection handbook, which specifies the steps that should be taken at each stage of processing to ensure reporting units' individual data are protected. The microdata files provided to users are anonymised.
No additional confidentiality measures have been adopted to those already indicated as usual in all operations of the INE.
- 7.1Confidentiality - policy
- 8Release policy
- 8.1Release calendar
The advance release calendar that shows the precise release dates for the coming year is disseminated in the last quarter of each year.
- 8.2Release calendar access
The calendar is disseminated on the INEs Internet website (Publications Calendar)
- 8.3User access
The data are released simultaneously according to the advance release calendar to all interested parties by issuing the press release. At the same time, the data are posted on the INE's Internet website (www.ine.es/en) almost immediately after the press release is issued. Also some predefined tailor-made requests are sent to registered users. Some users could receive partial information under embargo as it is publicly described in the European Statistics Code of Practice
- 8.1Release calendar
- 9Frequency of dissemination
- 9.1Frequency of dissemination
Annual
- 9.1Frequency of dissemination
- 10Accessibility and clarity
- 10.1News release
The results of the statistical operations are normally disseminated by using press releases that can be accessed via both the corresponding menu and the Press Releases Section in the web
- 10.2Publications
No specific publications are made. All the information related to the Statistics on Migrations and Changes of Residence is published on the INE website in the section Demography and population / Demographic phenomena
- 10.3On-line database
INEbase is the system the INE uses to store statistical information on the Internet. It contains all the information the INE produces in electronic formats. The primary organisation of the information follows the theme-based classification of the Inventory of Statistical Operations of the State General Administration . The basic unit of INEbase is the statistical operation, defined as the set of activities that lead to obtaining statistical results on a determined sector or subject based on the individually collected data. Also included in the scope of this definition are synthesis preparation.
The tables with the aggregated results are available at:
- 10.4Micro-data access
A lot of statistical operations disseminate public domain anonymized files, available free of charge for downloading in the INE website Microdata Section
The Statistics on Migrations and Changes of Residence will have microdata files; however, they will not be available at the time of first publication, but some time later.
- 10.5Other
This operation makes it possible to respond to requests for customized information that are not covered in its results tables, subject in all cases to a feasibility study by the INE.
The request is made via the User Assistance Service:
https://www.ine.es/prodyser/informacion
- 10.6Documentation on methodology
The methodology of the operation can be accessed at:
- 10.7Quality documentation
Fields 10.6 to 17.2 of this document are considered the user-oriented quality report for this operation.
- 10.1News release
- 11Quality management
- 11.1Quality assurance
Quality assurance framework for the INE statistics is based on the ESSCoP, the European Statistics Code of Practice made by EUROSTAT. The ESSCoP is made up of 16 principles, gathered in three areas: Institutional Environment, Processes and Products. Each principle is associated with some indicators which make possible to measure it. In order to evaluate quality, EUROSTAT provides different tools: the indicators mentioned above, Self-assessment based on the DESAP model, peer review, user satisfaction surveys and other proceedings for evaluation.
The Migration and Changes of Residence Statistics are prepared on the basis of official administrative data from:
- the annual Population Censuses, which are statistics that have already been produced. Between every two censuses, it is determined which people have entered, left or remain in the population as residents.
- Municipal Register: a search is run in the register for these people's migration history. The basic demographic variables are taken from the censuses, which have been previously filtered. Variables that refer to the specific movement itself (such as date, origin, destination) undergo a process of valuation and, where appropriate, imputation.
Therefore, the quality of their results depends on the quality of their sources.
In any case, their results are consistent, by construction, with those of the annual population censuses. There is also full consistency between all territorial levels.
- 11.2Quality assessment
The consistency of the data with those provided by the annual population censuses is guaranteed, as well as with the figures of births and deaths since their launch in 2012.
The quality depends to a large extent on the quality of the Municipal Register and, interchangeably, on all those official administrative sources that are used to construct the population census.
As the Municipal Register is an official administrative register, all demographic concepts (population, migrations) undergo a process that is more administrative than demographic, but this is the best approximation that can be made.
- 11.1Quality assurance
- 12Relevance
- 12.1User needs
These data comprise the official migration data of Spain.
Among the users one can highlight:
- Ministries and other national public bodies (CSIC, CED, observatories, etc...) and international bodies (Eurostat, OECD, the United Nations, IMF).
- Regional administrations (autonomous communities, provincial councils, city and town councils, etc.)
- Researchers and academia
- Non-profit companies and institutions (business research services, foundations, associations, etc.)
- Press and specialised media
- Individuals
- Other units of the INE
Each of these users has different needs depending on the use and utility of the information they need.
- 12.2User satisfaction
The INE has carried out general user satisfaction surveys in 2007, 2010, 2013, 2016 and 2019 and it plans to continue doing so every three years. The purpose of these surveys is to find out what users think about the quality of the information of the INE statistics and the extent to which their needs of information are covered. In addition, additional surveys are carried out in order to acknowledge better other fields such as dissemination of the information, quality of some publications...
On the INE website, in its section Methods and Projects / Quality and Code of Practice / INE quality management / User surveys are available surveys conducted to date.(Click next link)
- 12.3Completeness
This operation provides all the information required by the Regulation 862/2007 of the European Parliament and the Council of Europe on Migrations and International Protection Statistics in relation to figures on migrations between Spain and the rest of the world.
The rate of mandatory results available is therefore 100% (R1=100%).
- 12.1User needs
- 13Accuracy and reliability
- 13.1Overall accuracy
No measurements are available of the accuracy of the results of this operation.
The main source of error stems from the lack of records, in the Municipal Register, of emigrations abroad. This shortcoming is offset by the expiry processes for foreigners implemented by the Municipal Register in recent years, although they provide the information with a certain time lag.
As the Statistics on Migrations and Changes of Residence are an operation based on official administrative sources, there are no sampling errors. Non-sampling errors can come from both the sources and the processing of the information itself in this operation. Direct measurement of accuracy is not considered possible in this case.
- 13.2Sampling error
Not applicable to this statistical operation, as it is a statistic based on official administrative sources and other statistics that have already been prepared, so it is not a sample-based survey.
- 13.3Non-sampling error
Given that it is an operation based on official administrative data (see section 18.1), the non-sampling errors of this statistical operation are mainly due to those found in the Municipal Register, which has already been previously filtered. Despite that, there are some non-sampling errors inherent in its nature:
- Failure to fill in the variables of country of origin or destination in external migrations. For example, for the 2022 data we have:
A5 (country of origin) = 20%
A5 (destination country) = 80%
A5 (rest of variables)= 0%
- Possible lack of information at the time of estimation due to delays in registration, which is offset by estimation mechanisms.
- 13.1Overall accuracy
- 14Timeliness and punctuality
- 14.1Timeliness
These results are disseminated annually, definitively, 12 months after their reference date (TP2 = 12 months).
- 14.2Punctuality
This operation is disseminated within the period established in the INE's structural statistics calendar (TP3=0; it is published without delay).
- 14.1Timeliness
- 15Coherence and Comparability
- 15.1Comparability - geographical
The results are completely consistent across territories, at all levels of disaggregation. In addition, they are calculated based on the definitions set out in Regulation 862/2007 of the European Parliament and of the Council on Community statistics on migration and international protection and sponsored, in turn, by the United Nations, which is conducive to their international comparability.
- 15.2Comparability - over time
Data are provided from 2021 according to a homogeneous methodology and are, therefore, fully comparable in time from that year.
The annual series of results therefore consists of 2 comparable elements, i.e. CC2 = 2.
- 15.3Coherence - cross domain
The Migration and Changes of Residence Statistics (EMCR) are compiled following the concepts and definitions established by Eurostat in Regulation 862/2007 of the European Parliament and of the Council on Migration and International Protection Statistics, which is conducive to their international comparability.
These results are consistent with annual population censuses, and explain the population change along with births and deaths from the Vital Statistics.
Until 2021, there were two sources related to migrations, the Migration Statistics and the Residential Variation Statistics.
The Residential Variation Statistics, also prepared by the INE, consisted of an exploitation of the census changes registered in the Municipal Register of Inhabitants. Although it was the only source of data that addressed the concept of migrations until 2007, since 2008 it has coexisted with the Migration Statistics, which carried out a statistical treatment of these variations in the census to adapt to the concepts imposed by the Regulation, hence the differences between the two.
However, since 2021, with the implementation of the annual population censuses, it has been necessary to change the calculation method to consistently explain the population change given by these censuses. It was considered useful to capture this change in a new statistic, the EMCR [Migration and Changes of Residence Statistics].
- 15.4Coherence - internal
The data are fully consistent both inter-territorially and demographically.
- 15.1Comparability - geographical
- 16Cost and burden
- 16.1Cost and burden
These statistics are prepared on the basis of official administrative sources. It does not require for this purpose the collaboration of reporting units and does not generate data collection costs.
The estimate of the budgetary resources necessary to finance this statistic provided for in the 2023 Annual Programme of the National Statistical Plan 2021-2024 is 117.86 thousand euros.
- 16.1Cost and burden
- 17Data revision
- 17.1Data revision - policy
The INE of Spain has a policy which regulates the basic aspects of statistical data revision, seeking to ensure process transparency and product quality. This policy is laid out in the document approved by the INE board of directors on 13 March of 2015, which is available on the INE website, in the section "Methods and projects/Quality and Code of Practice/INE’s Quality management/INE’s Revision policy" (link).
This general policy sets the criteria that the different type of revisions should follow: routine revision- it is the case of statistics whose production process includes regular revisions-; more extensive revision- when methodological or basic reference source changes take place-; and exceptional revision- for instance, when an error appears in a published statistic-.
Published data are definitive and are not subject to revision.
The INE has a Policy that regulates the basic aspects of the revision of statistical data, guaranteeing the transparency of the processes and the quality of the products. This policy is described in the document approved by the Board of Directors at the meeting held on 13 March 2015. The document is available in the section of Methods and Projects/Quality and Code of Best Practices/INE Quality Management/Revision policy of the National Institute of Statistics"(link).
This general policy sets out the criteria to be followed for different types of revisions: routine - in cases of statistics which are regularly revised by their nature - major revisions, due to methodological changes or changes in baseline sources of statistics, and extraordinary revisions (for example, those due to an error in published statistics).
- 17.2Data revision - practice
The data published are final and are not subject to revision.
- 17.1Data revision - policy
- 18Statistical processing
- 18.1Source data
The Migration and Changes of Residence Statistics are prepared on the basis of official administrative sources:
- The Population Census, which is a set of statistics that is already produced.
- Municipal residence register: statistical treatment of the changes recorded in the Municipal Register database.
The Municipal Register is the official administrative register that records all the residents in the municipality. Everyone who lives in Spain must register in the Municipal Register in which he or she habitually resides. Those who live in several municipalities may only register in the one where they live for the longest period of the year.
Municipal councils are responsible for developing, updating, reviewing and safekeeping, and they must carry out the necessary actions and operations so that the data in their registers is consistent with reality.
Municipal councils manage the registers in a computerised manner and in cases in which they lack the resources to do so, it is carried out by the Provincial Councils.
With the municipal registers resulting from the renewal of the register referred on 01/05/1996 and the monthly variations that have occurred since then, the INE has generated a database that is known as the Continuous Register.
- 18.2Frequency of data collection
Annual
- 18.3Data collection
The Migration and Change of Residence Statistics are sets of statistics based on official administrative data, and each of them is collected in its own way:
- the Population Census, which is a set of statistics produced by the INE every year.
- Municipal Register: data prepared from the statistical treatment of the variations recorded in the Municipal Register database. This database is updated monthly by the INE based on the information received from each of the municipalities in Spain regarding the latest changes registered in the respective municipal registers, which makes it possible to manage them centrally.
- 18.4Data validation
Multiple analyses are carried out of the evolution of the migration figures and their consistency with the data from the various demographic statistics.
The official administrative sources on which this is based are previously validated.
- 18.5Data compilation
The starting point to obtain the reference data for a given year from the Migration and Changes of Residence Statistics are the population censuses at the beginning and end of said year. The first will be the census on 1 January of the reference year, and the one at the end of the period will correspond to the census on 1 January of the following year.
With the two censuses available, we compare which persons were in one and not in the other, or are present in both. Those who were in the second census and not the first, constitute the additions to the population (which can be foreign immigrations or births), and conversely we obtain the ones that exit the population (foreign emigrations and deaths).
Once it has been determined which people have entered or left the town or city, or remain in it, one refers to the centralised database of the Municipal Register to recover their registry history, which will allow their migration history to be reconstructed.
- 18.6Adjustment
No seasonal adjustment, breakdown, time series of similar methods are used.
- 18.1Source data
- 19Comment
- 19.1Comment
- 19.1Comment