July 6, 2024

Vagmare.com

The Intersection of Information and Insight

where are our new migrants coming from?

5 min read

Key takeaways

As of 2023, 30.7% of Australia’s population was born overseas, the highest since 1892.This percentage dropped to around 10% post-World War II but has generally increased since then.

The 2022-23 financial year saw a record Net Overseas Migration of 528,000 people. This boom followed the reopening of borders after COVID-19 restrictions.

The latest Estimated Resident Population (ERP) shows significant growth in populations from India, China, and the Philippines. India had the highest increase, with 133,760 new residents (19% increase from 2021).

The ABS has just released population estimates by country of birth for the year 2023.

Normally we only get an update on this from the Census (every 5 years) but in recent years the ABS has started publishing Estimated Resident Population by country of birth.

Australia remains a nation of migrants, with the latest figures showing that 30.7% of us were born in another country.

That’s the highest percentage nationally recorded since 1892 (yes, that’s eighteen ninety-two!).

The percentage born overseas fell to its lowest level of around 10% at the end of World War II.

The postwar migration program bolstered it rapidly and it has been largely increasing ever since.

There was a small dip during 2021 when the Census was taken in the middle of COVID-19 border closures and lockdowns.

Estimated Resident Population Proportion Born Overseas

Where are our new migrants coming from?

Since the end of COVID-19 border closures, our migration has boomed.

As reported here previously, the 2022-23 financial year had a record Net Overseas Migration of 528,000 people in just a year.

So 528,000 more people entered the country to settle permanently or long-term than those who left.

The new Estimated Resident Population (ERP) by country of birth figures can give us an idea of where these new migrants are coming from, and how the population of different migrant groups has changed since the 2021 Census.

These figures are a little different from the Census, even in the base year of 2021.

For starters, ERP is calculated on June 30th, while the Census is taken in early August (August 10th in 2021).

And the country of birth question in the Census has a small “Not stated” component, i.e., people who didn’t answer the question.

These are estimated into the population in the ERP.

For this reason, the Census shows Australia’s total percentage of overseas-born population as 27.7% in 2021, while the population estimate is 29.3%.

For the year ended June 30th, 2023, this has risen to 30.7% of the population, or 8.18 million people.

This chart shows the top 10 countries of birth at the 2021 Census Australia-wide, by percentage of population:

Birthplace 2021

The insight from the ERP by country of birth shows us what has changed since the Census.

These are the top 20 growing countries of birth for Australian residents for the two years ending June 2023.

Country of birth Population increase 2021-2023 % increase from 2021 population
India +133,760 19%
China +71,100 12%
Philippines +53,620 17%
Nepal +48,760 37%
Pakistan +24,270 25%
Vietnam +24,120 9%
Colombia +23,960 61%
Thailand +21,120 24%
Sri Lanka +18,180 13%
Indonesia +16,450 18%
Hong Kong +15,280 15%
Bhutan +15,030 118%
Brazil +14,760 28%
Afghanistan +14,710 23%
New Zealand +14,080 2%
South Africa +12,060 6%
Taiwan +10,750 21%
Fiji +10,460 14%
Bangladesh +9,000 16%
Iran +8,760 11%

Source: Australian Bureau of Statistics: Australian population by country of birth June 2023

India could overtake the UK as the top birthplace outside Australia

India was already showing the largest growth between the 2016 and 2021 Censuses, and in the last two years, added almost twice as many people to the national population as any other country.

At this point, there are 845,800 people born in India living in Australia.

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