The Sources and Diversity of Immigrant Population Change in Australia, 1981–2011

Author:

Raymer James1,Shi Yanlin2,Guan Qing1,Baffour Bernard1,Wilson Tom3

Affiliation:

1. School of Demography, Australian National University, 9 Fellows Road, Acton, ACT 2601, Australia

2. Department of Applied Finance and Actuarial Studies, Macquarie University, Sydney, Australia

3. Northern Institute, Charles Darwin University, Darwin, Australia

Abstract

Abstract Australia has one of the largest percentages of immigrant populations in the developed world with a highly regulated system of immigration control and regular censuses to track their changes over time. However, the ability to explain the population change through the demographic components of immigration, emigration, and death by age and sex is complicated because of differences in measurement and sources of information. In this article, we explore three methods for reconciling the demographic accounts from 1981 to 2011 for the Australia-born and 18 foreign-born population groups. We then describe how the immigrant populations have changed and what has contributed most to that change. We find that the sources of immigrant population change have varied considerably by age, sex, country of birth, and period of immigration. Immigrants from Europe are currently the oldest and slowest-growing populations, whereas those from elsewhere are growing rapidly and exhibit relatively young population age structures. Studying these patterns over time helps us to understand the nature of international migration and its long-term contributions to population change and composition.

Publisher

Duke University Press

Subject

Demography

Reference48 articles.

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