
The sound of English, Korean and French is once again often heard drifting through the plane-tree-lined streets of Shanghai’s former French Concession – widely seen as the heart of the city’s international community. And local residents point to a gradual, though uneven, recovery.
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The French and German consulates in Shanghai have reported over the past six months that the local expat populations from their countries were “stable or increasing again”, said Denis Depoux, a global managing director at consultancy Roland Berger, who has lived in the city for 11 years.
The European expat population – boosted by a recovery in international student numbers – may even have bounced back to pre-pandemic levels, according to Depoux. But the same cannot be said for the United States or Japan, which saw a much larger exodus of expats during the pandemic and have struggled to recover, he added.
Still, a report by recruitment agency DirectHR last year suggests there is a long way to go. The firm found that Shanghai’s foreign population had risen from a low of 84,237 in 2023 to reach nearly 92,000 in 2024 – though that remains far short of 2015’s peak of about 178,000.
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The expat community in Shanghai has turned over – it’s a new crowd now

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