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Volume 15, Number 2, November 1998

Contents

Gordon A. Carmichael Presidential Address
Things Ain't What They Used To Be! Demography, Mental Cohorts, Morality and Values in Post-War Australia
Charles A. Price W.D. Borrie Lecture
Post-War Immigration: 1947-98
Gordon Carmichael and Christine Mason Consensual Partnering in Australia: A Review and 1991 Census Profile: Part 1
Martin Bell and Mike Stratton Understanding the 1996 Census Migration Data
Yan Hao Dependency of the Chinese Elderly: An Exploration

Abstracts

CONSENSUAL PARTNERING IN AUSTRALIA: A REVIEW AND 1991 CENSUS PROFILE
Part 1: Review and Basic Demography

Gordon Carmichael, The Australian National University
Christine Mason, Australian Bureau of Statistics

This paper is the first part of a two-part examination of consensual partnering in Australia. It reviews the Australian literature on consensual partnering, summarizing evidence of its proliferation since the mid-1960s and also the findings of investigations into its nature and the personal attributes that predispose some people more than others to adopt it. It then discusses the shortcomings of Australian census data as a source for studying consensual unions, before using data from the 1991 Census to present the first elements in a comprehensive profile of the cohabiting population. These cover the basic demography of consensual partnering: the ages, marital statuses and family type distributions of those involved.

UNDERSTANDING THE 1996 CENSUS MIGRATION DATA

Martin Bell, The University of Adelaide
Mike Stratton, Australian Bureau of Statistics

The Australian Census provides two approaches to measuring migration: indicators which distinguish movers from non-movers, and a geographic classification which identifies each person's usual residence on census night, and their usual address one year and five years previously. Although these data represent a rich source of information, they contain several traps for the unwary. We show that differences in the variables and classifications used can result in marked variations in the apparent intensity and patterns of migration. The questionnaire and processing methodology used in the 1996 Census also resulted in a number of inconsistencies between the migration indicators and the usual address information. We examine the magnitude and source of these anomalies, assess their implications and propose a partial solution.

DEPENDENCY OF THE CHINESE ELDERLY: AN EXPLORATION

Yan Hao, The Australian National University

The paper explores the Chinese elderly's dependency, or need for assistance, in four key functional areas: physical, mental, social and economic, based on data from the 1992 National Survey on the Old-age Support System (NSOSS). The approximate indicators, selected on data availability, show that the dependency rates of the elderly differed markedly by functional area. Only a very small proportion of the elderly were physically dependent or partly dependent. In contrast, economic dependency was a common phenomenon. The dependency rates varied by age, sex and urban-rural residence. Older people, females and rural residents were more likely to have a higher need for assistance. These findings have major policy implications in old age support and aged care programs.