
Customer Success Manager
The 2021 Census in Australia could be our most important ever, as it can show the effect of all the changes taking place in Australia right now, in response to the COVID-19 pandemic. We run a Census every 5 years in Australia, and it provides a demographic baseline for all the characteristics that make us who we are in this country. It’s the basis of so many decisions on communities and infrastructure. While we are seeing the upheaval from this pandemic right now, most aspects of the 2016 Census are still very valid and you can rely on them for understanding small populations in your community.
There are some things which are going to be changing markedly at the moment – for instance, I wouldn’t be relying on unemployment rates calculated from the Census right now, nor the method of travel to work data (I’ll look in another blog at how many people worked from home before this).
However, the basics of age structure and household type, education levels and cultural background are all still highly relevant. And if people are moving around less, these aspects of demographics might actually be more stable over the next year than they have been before.
The 2021 Census will be very important, and to be able to look at change over a 5 year period is vital. For instance, we may see substantial increases in unemployment, major changes to migration and settlement patterns for overseas arrivals, either more or less births (depending on who you ask), and of course changes in how Australians get to work – with so many now working from home – will this become more common in the future?
I’ll cover these in more detail in a future blog. It’s vitally important that the 2021 Census be run, and provide the information we need to plan the long recovery from this. The last Census was in 2016. We’re not due for a Census this year, it’s next year. But what if we were? Would the Census be another thing that got cancelled like everything seems to at the moment?
I don’t think so. I hope it wouldn’t, given how important it is. In fact, have you considered that this year, in the middle of a pandemic might be a good time to actually run a Census?
The USA is already doing this. They did have their 10-yearly Census scheduled for 2020, and they are pressing ahead with it in the field at the moment. They run one every 10 years, and this is the scheduled year. There are some changes to procedures and timeframes, but otherwise the US Census is going ahead as planned.
Suppose we did have a Census in Australia in 2020. A “Census 2020” here would capture the information about how our society is changing as a response to the Coronavirus. But there would even be some upsides to the collection – it would also not suffer from issues which have affected Censuses more and more in over the past 2 decades.
Censuses have become more difficult to run in recent years, with the ABS putting a lot of resources into getting in touch with people who are harder and harder to contact.
The USA is implementing extensions to response periods and social distancing provisions for their Census officers, but going ahead with their decennial count. Obviously they agree that the Census is vitally important for the community. The UK have a Census next year, in 2021, the same year as us. We are fortunate to have the Census every 5 years in Australia – most are every 10.
We will, of course, monitor developments around the Census here. Already we know there will be a new question in 2021 on long-term health conditions. Some of these are known to be complicating factors in Coronavirus cases. How useful would that information be now?
The fact is that Australia’s Census is not scheduled for 2020 – it’s 2021 – next year, on August 10th. Hopefully, we will have returned to some semblance of normality by then.
Our specialists have deep expertise in demographics and spatial analysis, urban economics, housing research, social research and population forecasting
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