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Achieving population targets for Australia: and analysis of the options

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posted on 2017-05-04, 04:59 authored by Kippen, Rebecca, McDonald, Peter
The authors argue that, if Australia is to achieve a stationary population (zero population growth) within one generation, there is only one feasible path: net migration should be between sixty and a hundred thousand a year while the total fertility rate should be between 1.65 and 1.8. If fertility is at the lower end of this range migration should be higher, and vice versa. This path would take the population to between 24 and 26 million by around 2037 and maintain it at this level. Their analysis shows that a lower stationary population of around 21 million could only be achieved by higher fertility (2.06) and zero migration. In contrast, if fertility were to fall to 1.1, very high migration (around 400,000 p.a.) would be required to achieve a stationary population, and the size of that population would be much larger (around 50 million). They also argue that low fertility (around 1.65) and zero migration would provoke a trend towards a dramatic population decline which would be difficult to check or reverse. Copyright. Monash University and the author/s

History

Date originally published

1998

Source

People and place, vol. 6, no. 2 (1998), p. 11-23. ISSN 1039-4788

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