Indigenous population change in the Northern Territory 1966 to 2031.
Wilson, Tom ; Condon, John R.
This paper examines how the Northern Territory's Indigenous
demography has changed over recent decades, an assessment made possible
by a recently constructed Indigenous demographic database covering the
period 1966-2001. The paper then presents population forecasts to 2031
prepared with a new population projection program specially designed to
model the population by indigenous status. The results show that
considerable growth and modest ageing of the NT Indigenous population
may be expected.
INTRODUCTION
It is widely recognised that Indigenous population statistics in
Australia are lower in quality and less complete in coverage than those
for the Australian population as a whole. However, evidence from a
number of sources indicates that these data shortcomings are much less
of a problem in the Northern Territory (NT). For example, Indigenous
birth and death statistics are deemed to be near complete; (1, 2, 3)
special procedures are used in many areas for enumerating Indigenous
people in the Census (though these remain far from perfect); (4) and the
error of closure for the NT Indigenous population has been small in
recent intercensal periods. (5) Error of closure refers to the
difference between the population estimate from one census and the
population from the previous census 'rolled forward' to
account for births, deaths and migrations.
Recently the Indigenous demographic data coverage for the NT was
substantially expanded through the construction of a high-quality and
internally consistent database of Indigenous population estimates,
deaths and births by the second author of this paper. (6) Covering 1966
to 2001, this database not only provides a unique insight into the
NT's Indigenous demographic transformation, but also gives a
reliable foundation on which to prepare population forecasts.
The aim of this paper is to describe how the NT's Indigenous
population has changed in recent decades and how it is likely to change
in the future. The future Indigenous demography of the NT has obvious
relevance in many areas of policymaking and service delivery, ranging
from educational provision, economic development, employment
opportunities, welfare provision, the criminal justice system, health
care and housing provision (especially for the growing elderly
population). Although this paper is concerned with Territory-wide
demographic change, the spatial dimensions of Indigenous population
growth should also be mentioned. Past trends suggest that much of the
coming Indigenous population growth is likely to occur outside Darwin,
with attendant implications for major non-metropolitan service centres
such as Alice Springs, Katherine and Tennant Creek. Regional NT
projections will be the focus of further research.
The paper first of all describes the data and methods used to
construct the database and how it was possible to ensure internal
consistency and a high level of confidence in its accuracy. Some
selected key changes to the NT Indigenous population over recent decades
are then described using the database. The paper then switches attention
to the future. A new population projection model designed to prepare NT
Indigenous population forecasts is briefly outlined, and the various
projection assumptions described. The final substantive section of the
paper then presents forecasts of the future size and composition of the
Territory's Indigenous population from 2001 to 2031.
NT INDIGENOUS DEMOGRAPHIC DATABASE
The experimental Indigenous Estimated Resident Population (ERP) for
the NT at 30 June 2001 produced by ABS (7) formed the starting point for
the construction of the NT Indigenous Demographic (NTID) database. This
was taken to be the most accurate recent estimate available for the NT
Indigenous population. Indigenous population estimates for earlier years
were then calculated by reverse projecting the 2001 estimates using data
on deaths of Indigenous NT residents between 1967 and 2001 obtained from
the ABS national deaths database. In the NT, death registrations have
been almost complete since at least the early 1960s but identification
of Indigenous people in those registrations has not. Indigenous status
has been included on NT death notification forms since 1988; the ABS has
assessed the completeness of identification since then as very high. (8)
Prior to 1988, Indigenous status was not included on death notification
forms. For deaths that were registered in the NT between 1967 and 1988,
Indigenous status was inferred by the second-named author of this paper
using other information on the death registration, such as an obvious
Aboriginal name for the deceased or their parents, birth or burial in a
remote Aboriginal community in the NT, burial by a pastor of the
Aboriginal Inland Mission, etc.
This inference process could not be undertaken for the small number
of deaths of NT residents who died in another state; Indigenous status
as recorded by interstate death registries was assumed to be correct.
The inference method was validated by comparing inferred with notified
Indigenous status for a sample of deaths registered in 1991; there was a
high level of agreement between inferred and notified Indigenous status
(94 per cent). Due to small amounts of net interstate migration being
reported by the census, migration was assumed to be zero. Full details
of the data sources and methods used to produce the time-series of
population estimates for the NT Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander
population have been documented elsewhere. (9) We now turn to give a
brief overview of how the NT's Indigenous demography has changed
over the course of the 1966-2001 period, predominantly using data
extracted or derived from the NTID database.
NT INDIGENOUS POPULATION CHANGE 1966-2001
Growth
In 1966 the Indigenous population of the NT is estimated to have
been 25,345, about 2/5ths of the size it is today (Table 1). The
increase in population to 2001 has thus been considerable (124 per
cent), exceeding national population growth over the same period (67 per
cent), though not that of the NT non-Indigenous population (314 per
cent). The growth in the NT Indigenous population has been driven by
above-replacement fertility amongst Indigenous women, Indigenous births
to non-Indigenous women, declining mortality rates (see Table 2) and a
young age structure. Trends in mortality and fertility over the four
decades covered by the NTID database are discussed below, and the
changing age-sex profile is described. Due to space limitations the
discussion is necessarily brief and priority is given to those measures
of population change which are useful in informing projection
assumptions.
Fertility
Indigenous fertility in the Northern Territory has declined
substantially since the late 1960s. Table 2 presents estimates of the
pseudo-General Fertility Rate (GFR) estimated for each intercensal
period between 1966 and 2001. This is a pseudo-GFR because the numerator of this 'rate' includes all births counted as Indigenous
(including those to non-Indigenous women), while the denominator consists of Indigenous women aged 15-49. Estimates of the number of
Indigenous babies born were obtained by reverse projecting the
populations in the NTID database back to birth. Unfortunately these
births data do not permit age-specific rates to be calculated. A similar
non-Indigenous pseudo-GFR was calculated for comparative purposes, as
was the GFR for Australia as a whole.
Another source on fertility trends, ABS births registration data,
is available for more recent years. Table 3 shows Total Fertility Rates
(TFRs) by Indigenous status of mother in the NT, and for comparative
purposes, Australia as a whole. The temporal coverage is limited because
Indigenous status has only been collected on NT birth registration forms
since 1988 and our data holdings only go back to 1990. Whilst the
pseudo-GFR reveals long-run downwards trend of Indigenous fertility, the
TFRs shown in Table 3 indicate no appreciable decline over the 1990s.
ABS births data do not provide a complete picture of Northern
Territory childbearing, however, due to mixed Indigenous/non-Indigenous
partnering. ABS classifies a birth as Indigenous when one or both
parents are Indigenous. Unfortunately this precludes some theoretically
possible options. Evidence suggests that a small number of births to
mixed Indigenous/non-Indigenous couples are regarded as non-Indigenous.
(10) To gain some indication of the Indigenous status of births to mixed
Indigenous/non-Indigenous couples a number of census tables were
purchased. Although the census does not directly collect data on numbers
of births and the Indigenous status of babies and parents, it is
possible to obtain data on the Indigenous status of natural and adopted
children aged 0-4 in family households by parents' Indigenous
status. These data can only be regarded as proxy indicators of
Indigenous status at birth, of course. Nonetheless in the absence of a
better data source we make use of these figures. Table 5 shows the
relevant counts from the 1981 to 2001 censuses. It can be seen that
whilst the majority of children with parents of different identities are
Indigenous, a minority are reported as non-Indigenous. Unfortunately the
data in this table from 1981 look less reliable. The number of
Indigenous lone parents in 1981 seems very low, and a comparison with
the Indigenous status of children aged 5-9 in 1986 reveals major
discrepancies which do not exist when comparing later censuses in a
similar way. Table 6 makes use of these counts to estimate the
Indigenous status distribution of children by Indigenous status of
mother. These proportions are used as an approximation of the Indigenous
status distribution of births in the five years prior to each census,
and are the proportions required by the population projection model
(described below). Excluded in calculating the proportions are those
children reported as Indigenous when both parents are non-Indigenous
(and vice versa), and children where the mother's Indigenous status
was not known (in lone father families and not stated census responses).
Mortality
Table 4 shows how NT Indigenous death rates have declined between
1967 and 2000 by sex and age group. For comparison, statistics for the
total Australian population are also given. For both NT Indigenous males
and females it is clear that considerable progress has been made in
combating under-five mortality. For females substantial reductions in
mortality have been made in the other age groups as well. For men, there
has been little improvement in the younger and mid-adult ages, though
significant reductions in older age mortality have been achieved.
These death rate changes translate to significant improvements in
life expectancy at birth. NT Indigenous males have seen their life
expectancy rise from 52.3 years in 1967-71 to 59.9 years by 1997-2001;
for females the equivalent figures are 53.7 and 66.0 years. For NT
Indigenous women the improvement has been such that the gap with total
Australian female life expectancy has narrowed from about 21 years in
1967-71 to 16 years in 1997-2001. For NT Indigenous men the gap has
unfortunately widened from 15.5 to 17 years, but in absolute terms life
expectancy at birth has increased by nearly eight years over the period.
Indigenous mortality in the NT remains very high but, in stark
contrast to the commonly held pessimistic view of Indigenous mortality
change, important progress is being made. The evidence reported here
suggests that efforts to improve NT Indigenous health and combat high
mortality rates are worthwhile and effective. But they also show that
efforts need to be redoubled. Further details on mortality change in the
NT Indigenous population are available in other papers. (11)
Age-sex structure
How have the trends in the demographic components of change
discussed above impacted on the age-sex profile of the NT's
Indigenous population? Figure 1 shows population pyramids for 1966, 1981
and 2001. The concave-sided pyramid of 1966 clearly reveals the impact
of very high fertility and mortality in the decades preceding that year.
In the 1960s and 70s high fertility rates, coupled with relatively large
numbers in the peak child-bearing age groups, continued to generate
successively larger birth cohorts. Over time, as fertility has fallen
and survival improved, the pyramid has shifted towards a straighter,
even slightly convex-sided, profile.
PROJECTION MODEL AND ASSUMPTIONS
Projection model
A multistate cohort-component projection model, NTPOP, was designed
to produce population forecasts for the Northern Territory by Indigenous
status (Indigenous and non-Indigenous). The description
'multi-state' refers to models in which people may transfer
between demographic 'states'. (12) In the NTPOP model this
includes movement between geographical areas, specifically migration
flows between the NT and the rest of Australia and overseas, and changes
of identification between non-Indigenous and Indigenous.
[FIGURE 1 OMITTED]
Additionally, NTPOP permits children born to mixed
Indigenous/non-Indigenous couples to take either Indigenous or
non-Indigenous identification. The model first projects births by
Indigenous status of mother. Then, a proportion of births to
non-Indigenous mothers are allocated to the Indigenous population, and
similarly, a proportion of births to Indigenous mothers are ascribed
non-Indigenous status. This latter feature is an important difference
with the ABS method of projecting the Indigenous population which
assumes that all births to mixed Indigenous/non-Indigenous couples are
Indigenous. (13) A detailed mathematical description of the NTPOP model
is available in a separate paper. (14)
Projection assumptions and jump-off populations
The initial, or jump-off, populations for the Indigenous
projections were the 30 June 2001 experimental ERPs, the most recent
Indigenous population estimates available. Projection assumptions are
set out in summary form in Table 7. Reasons for the assumptions as they
affect the Indigenous population are given briefly below.
In projecting fertility a crucial, and largely unexplored, question
is whether Indigenous fertility in the NT is likely to follow the
trajectory of Indigenous fertility Australia-wide and fall to around
replacement level, (15) or whether the particular socioeconomic
conditions of the NT will maintain higher fertility. Although the
long-run picture of Indigenous fertility is one of decline (Table 4), no
clear pattern of decrease or increase can be seen in the Indigenous TFRs
of recent years shown in Table 3. In the absence of better information a
'status quo' projection was made. The average TFR for
Indigenous women for the 10 years to mid-2001, 2.61, was assumed to
apply for the whole projection horizon. The future proportions of babies
born to non-Indigenous mothers assumed to be Indigenous were based on a
linear extrapolation of the 1986 to 2001 figures in Table 6. By 2030-31
6.9 per cent of infants born to non-Indigenous mothers are assumed to be
Indigenous. Preparing an assumption for the proportion of babies born to
Indigenous mothers deemed non-Indigenous was more difficult given the
trend shown in Table 6. It was decided to hold the 2001 Census
proportion of 0.7 per cent constant.
It has been assumed that, in line with past trends, Indigenous life
expectancy will continue to increase. Recent successes in reducing NT
Indigenous adult mortality rates (16) as well as public pressure to
reduce still unacceptably high mortality point, in our view, to further
increases in life expectancy. Linear extrapolations of life expectancy
were made based on the period 1977 to 2001 for males and 1972 to 2001
for females because the long-run trends over these years appeared to be
roughly linear. This brings life expectancy at birth by 2030-31 to 68.0
years for males and 73.9 years for females.
The NTID database was constructed on the assumption of no net
interstate migration because of the historically small amounts of
Indigenous net migration recorded by the census. Whether allowance for
migration should be made in the projections is a more difficult
question, however. On the one hand NT Indigenous net interstate
migration appears to have been increasing over time. It was -76 in the
1986 to 91 period, -217 in 1991 to 96 and -426 in 1996 to 2001. On the
other hand there is some uncertainty surrounding the reliability of
census migration data for the Indigenous population. Aside from
under-enumeration, the conventional notions of home and usual residence
which underpin the concept of migration may not always be culturally
applicable to some Indigenous communities. For the purposes of these
projections we took the decision to include Indigenous migration. In-
and out-migration rates for the NT Indigenous population were set to
ensure a net loss of 85 per year, the annual average recorded by the
census over the 1996 to 2001 intercensal period.
Census immigration data as well as local anecdotal evidence reveal
Indigenous international migration to be extremely limited. An
assumption of no Indigenous international migration has therefore been
made.
In the construction of the NTID database it was assumed that
individuals would report their Indigenous status consistently from one
census to another. Although no direct data on identification change
exist, it is generally believed that very little Indigenous status
change occurs in the NT. The closest thing to evidence on this issue is
the small error of closure recorded for NT Indigenous population over
the last couple of intercensal periods (17). Table 8 presents our
calculations of the error of closure for the period between mid-1996 and
mid-2001. The estimate of 602 is equivalent to about 0.2 per cent per
annum in population growth. It should be stressed that the error of
closure is certainly not the same as identification change; errors of
closure contain unknown amounts of identification change and data
deficiencies. Nonetheless, for these projections we decided to include a
small amount of identification change (though, admittedly, this
introduces an inconsistency with the NTID database). Rates of change
from non-Indigenous to Indigenous were employed, equivalent to the 0.2
per cent per annum error of closure for 1996 to 2001. The same rates
were used for both males and females and all ages. No change from
Indigenous to non-Indigenous identification was assumed.
Finally, we included some actual data on components of change in
the initial years of the projections. Although 2001 had to be used as
the jump-off year of the projections, total births and deaths figures by
Indigenous status were available up to 2004-05. These data were used to
constrain projected births and deaths for this initial period of the
projection horizon. (18) The 'projected' population figures up
to 2005 may therefore be considered hybrid estimates-projections.
INDIGENOUS POPULATION PROJECTIONS, 2001-2031
Total population
The above projection assumptions and estimates were input into the
NTPOP model and projections produced from 2001 to 2031. The results show
that the Indigenous population of the Northern Territory is projected to
grow from 56,875 in 2001 to 98,052 by 2031, a 72 per cent increase.
Table 9 presents summary statistics. As a proportion of the total NT
population the Indigenous share is likely to rise somewhat, due to
slightly faster growth of the Indigenous compared to the non-Indigenous
population.
Births and deaths
The annual number of Indigenous births (from both Indigenous and
non-Indigenous mothers) is expected to increase from around 1,600 per
year currently to around 2,200 by the end of the projection horizon. The
number of Indigenous deaths is projected to rise from approximately 450
currently to around 650 by 2030-31.
Age-sex structure
Figure 2 illustrates the projected age-sex structure changes.
Declining mortality has the effect of gradually shifting the age
composition to an older profile with a smaller share of the population
below about age 35 and a larger share in the older adult ages. In terms
of population change by age group, the population pyramids clearly show
large increases at all ages between 2001 and 2031. Table 10 presents
some figures on absolute and relative increases by broad age group. One
of the most striking features of this table is the significant growth of
the 65+ population, projected to increase by 278 per cent over the
course of the projection horizon. The ageing of the population is also
apparent in the population's increasing median age. It is set to
rise from 21.8 years in 2001 to 26.9 by 2031. The NT Indigenous
population will remain very young, of course, and even by 2031 its
median age will be lower than the 2001 median ages of the NT
non-Indigenous population (32.4 years) and the total Australian
population (35.7 years).
[FIGURE 2 OMITTED]
ABS comparison
How do these projections compare with the ABS short-term
projections of the NT Indigenous population to 2009? Table 11 provides
the answer. The ABS high series allows for 'unexplained
growth', defined as population increase 'observed between the
1996 and 2001 censuses which cannot be attributed to natural
increase', (19) while the low series does not. The slower growth
projected by ABS in both series is due to assumptions of declining
fertility and no improvement in mortality.
Components of growth
The projected change in the NT Indigenous population may be
attributed to high fertility amongst Indigenous women, mixed parentage
childbearing, rising life expectancy, migration, identification changes
and a young age structure. But how can the relative contributions of
each of these processes be quantified? This section attempts to provide
an answer using the decomposition approach of Bongaarts and Bulatao.
(20) These authors investigated the components of future population
change in global regions by running a series of projections in which
factors affecting population growth were 'removed' one by one.
They first produced a projection in which the factors affecting
population growth were: a young age structure, rising life expectancy,
above-replacement fertility and net migration. In subsequent projections
they removed migration, then rising life expectancy (replaced with
constant life expectancy), and then above-replacement fertility
(substituted by replacement fertility). The final projection thus
included only replacement fertility and constant life expectancy,
illustrating the effects of a young age structure (that is, population
momentum). In decomposing the projection for the NT Indigenous
population we incorporated the additional factors of identification
change and mixed parentage childbearing. The various projections
produced for the decomposition are defined in Table 12.
The contributions of the various factors, together with their
percentage contribution to 2001 to 2031 growth, are shown in Figure 3.
Just over half the projected population growth to 2031 is due to the
young age structure of the NT Indigenous population (momentum). So even
if fertility fell to replacement level (a TFR of 2.15), mortality rates
did not change, there was no migration, no mixed parentage births and no
changing identification, the population would still grow to 78,434 by
2031. This would be a 38 per cent increase from 2001. Above-replacement
fertility (with all newly-born infants taking the Indigenous status of
their mothers) generates about a fifth of the population change over the
projection horizon. The net effect of allowing infants born to mixed
Indigenous/non-Indigenous couples to be either Indigenous or
non-Indigenous contributes about 12 per cent of the growth. This
contribution is positive because more non-Indigenous mothers give birth
to Indigenous babies than vice versa. Identification changes also make a
significant contribution, even with a low rate of identification change.
It should be noted that removing factors in a different order does
make a difference to the percentages (except for momentum), but the
differences are fairly small. For example, removing factors in the
opposite order to Table 12 (starting with the Standard projection, then
removing increasing life expectancy, then above-replacement fertility,
and so on) results in the percentage contributions to population growth
changing by no more than one per cent.
Uncertainty
Of course, uncertainty is the one absolute certainty about
population projections. NT Indigenous fertility might fall in the next
few years. The trend in life expectancy improvements could stall as
chronic diseases prove increasingly difficult to combat. The rate of
Indigenous/non-Indigenous mixed partnering could accelerate. Net
out-migration might increase as improved educational outcomes present NT
Indigenous people with increased access to Australia-wide labour
markets. It is important to be cognisant of the uncertainty inherent in
the projections reported in this paper, although quantification of the
uncertainty in the form of probabilistic forecasts must wait for a
future research project.
CONCLUSIONS
This paper has provided a brief account of how the Indigenous
demography of the NT has evolved over the period between 1966 and 2001,
and how we expect it to change in the years to 2031. The NTID database
has permitted, for the first time, medium-term demographic change in the
NT Indigenous population to be measured with a high degree of
confidence. Using statistics from the database we have shown how the
population has been undergoing a transition over the last
three-and-a-half decades from very high to lower fertility and
mortality, and how the population pyramid has 'aged' from very
young to young.
[FIGURE 3 OMITTED]
The projections reveal that considerable growth in the Indigenous
population may be expected in the coming decades. As Figure 3
demonstrates, even a momentum projection with replacement-level
fertility and no improvement in life expectancy will lead to a large
population increase. Substantial increases in size may be expected for
all age groups, with the older ages increasing by proportionately greater amounts (Table 10). These coming changes clearly present
considerable challenges for current and future NT and Commonwealth
governments.
References
(1) Births Australia 2005, catalogue no. 3301.0, Australian Bureau
of Statistics (ABS), Canberra, 2006
(2) Deaths Australia 2004, catalogue no. 3302.0, ABS, Canberra,
2005
(3) Personal communication from the NT Registrar-General, 2005
(4) D.F. Martin, F. Morphy, W.G. Sanders and J. Taylor, Making
Sense of the Census: Observations of the 2001 Enumeration in Remote
Aboriginal Australia, Australian National University E-Press, Canberra,
2004
(5) K. Ross, Population Issues, Indigenous Australians, ABS
Occasional Paper, ABS, Canberra, 1999; see also our calculations of the
1996-2001 error of closure in Table 8.
(6) J.R. Condon, T. Barnes. J. Cunningham and L. Smith, Demographic
characteristics and trends of the Northern Territory Indigenous
population, 1966 to 2001, Cooperative Research Centre for Aboriginal
Health, Darwin, 2004
(7) Experimental Estimates and Projections, Aboriginal and Torres
Strait Islander Australians, 30 June 1991 to 30 June 2009, catalogue no.
3238.0, ABS, Canberra, 2004
(8) ABS, 2005, op. cit.
(9) Condon et al., 2004, op. cit.
(10) Y. Kinfu and J. Taylor, 'On the components of Indigenous
population change', Australian Geographer, vol. 36, no. 2, 2005, pp
233-255
(11) See for example: J.R. Condon, T. Barnes, J. Cunningham and L.
Smith, 'Improvements in Indigenous mortality in the Northern
Territory over four decades', Australian and New Zealand Journal of
Public Health, vol. 28, no. 5, 2004, pp. 445-451; D.P. Thomas, J.R.
Condon, I.P. Anderson, S.Q. Li, S. Halpin, J. Cunningham and S.L.
Guthridge, 'Long-term trends in Indigenous deaths from chronic
diseases in the Northern Territory: a foot on the brake, a foot on the
accelerator', Medical Journal of Australia, vol. 185, no. 3,2006,
pp. 145-149; T. Wilson, J. Condon and T. Barnes, 'Northern
Territory Indigenous life expectancy improvements, 1967-2004',
unpublished paper, 2006.
(12) N. Keyfitz and H. Caswell, Applied Mathematical Demography,
third edition, Springer, New York, 2005
(13) ABS, 2004, op. cit.
(14) T. Wilson, 'A multistate indigenous status population
projection model, illustrated with an application to the Northern
Territory, Australia', unpublished paper, 2006
(15) ABS, 2006, op. cit.
(16) Condon et al., 2004, op. cit.
(17) Ross, 1999, op. cit.
(18) L. Simpson, 'Integrating estimates within population
forecasts', Applied Population and Policy, vol. 1. no. 2, 2004, pp.
89-104
(19) ABS, 2004, op. cit., p. 11
(20) J. Bongaarts and R.A. Bulatao, 'Completing the
demographic transition'. Population and Development Review, vol.
25, no. 3, 1999, pp. 515-529
Acknowledgment
Comments from Tony Barnes and Mary Beneforti on an earlier draft of
this paper are much appreciated. Additional data supplied by Yuejen Zhao
of the NT Department of Health and Community Services is gratefully
acknowledged. All errors, of course, remain our own.
Table 1: Estimates of the NT Indigenous population, 1966-2001
Annual average
per cent growth rate per cent of
Mid-year Population over previous 5 years NT population
1966 25,345 n/a n/a
1971 29,090 2.76 33.9
1976 33,218 2.65 33.8
1981 37,289 2.31 30.4
1986 41,890 2.33 27.1
1991 46,642 2.15 28.2
1996 51.922 2.14 28.6
2001 56,875 1.82 28.8
Sources: NTID database, ABS
Table 2: Pseudo-General Fertility Rate, NT Indigenous and non-Indigenous
populations, and General Fertility Rate, Australia, 1966-2001 (per 1000
population)
Period NT Indigenous NT non-Indigenous Australia
1966-71 191 103 85
1971-76 174 94 76
1976-81 144 75 63
1981-86 130 66 61
1986-91 119 61 57
1991-96 111 60 55
1996-2001 96 57 52
Source: calculated from the NTID database; ABS
Table 3: Total Fertility Rates for the NT by indigenous status of
mother, and Australia, 1990-91 to 2000-01
Financial NT Indigenous NT non-Indigenous
year mothers mothers Australia
1990-91 2.66 2.06 1.88
1991-92 2.72 1.90 1.87
1992-93 2.79 2.14 1.88
1993-94 2.66 2.05 1.85
1994-95 2.52 1.98 1.84
1995-96 2.68 2.05 1.78
1996-97 2.63 1.93 1.79
1997-98 2.20 2.07 1.76
1998-99 2.48 1.94 1.75
1999-2000 2.66 1.80 1.75
2000-01 2.81 1.81 1.74
Source: ABS, NTID database
Table 4: Percentage decline* in death rates by broad age group, NT
Indigenous and total Australian populations, 1967-2000
Age group NT Indigenous population Total Australian population
Males
0-4 85 76
5-24 22 59
25-44 12 32
45-64 14 65
65+ 31 48
Females
0-4 84 75
5-24 46 54
25-44 27 51
45-64 25 59
65+ 29 52
Sources: Calculated from the NTID database and ABS data
Note: *Calculated from the average annual rate of decrease as estimated
by a binomial regression model due to the volatile trends of the NT
Indigenous death rates. For consistency the same method was used for the
total Australian death rates
Table 5: Indigenous status of natural and adopted children aged 0-4 in
family households, Northern Territory, 1981-2001
Indigenous Non-
Both mother; indigenous
Indigenous Both parents non- mother; Lone
status of parents non- Indigenous Indigenous Indigenous
children Indigenous Indigenous father father mother
1981
Indigenous 2,505 24 283 278 5
Non-ind. 5 6,920 47 48 0
1986
Indigenous 1,894 0 205 196 236
Non-ind. 0 7,850 32 28 4
1991
Indigenous 2,013 23 217 206 272
Non-ind. 6 7,535 31 34 5
1996
Indigenous 2,334 6 250 257 637
Non-ind. 7 7,431 16 15 7
2001
Indigenous 2,424 13 268 222 563
Non-ind. 19 6,891 14 19 9
Indigenous Lone non- Lone non-
status of Lone Indigenous Indigenous Indigenous
children father mother father
1981
Indigenous 6 33 67
Non-ind. 0 297 624
1986
Indigenous 251 16 24
Non-ind. 4 341 345
1991
Indigenous 263 41 49
Non-ind. 5 416 474
1996
Indigenous 706 53 52
Non-ind. 4 530 506
2001
Indigenous 662 69 74
Non-ind. 3 445 484
Source: ABS census (unpublished data)
Table 6: Indigenous status distribution of natural and adopted children
aged 0-4 in family households by indigenous status of mother, Northern
Territory, 1981-2001 (per cent)
Children aged 0-4 Children aged 0-4
of Indigenous mothers of non-Indigenous mothers
Census Indigenous non-Indigenous Indigenous non-Indigenous
1981 98.3 1.7 4.1 95.9
1986 98.5 1.5 2.5 97.5
1991 98.6 1.4 3.0 97.0
1996 99.3 0.7 3.7 96.3
2001 99.3 0.7 3.8 96.2
Source: calculated from Table 5
Table 7: Summary of projection assumptions for the NT
Indigenous Non-indigenous
Fertility Constant TFR of 2.61 for Constant TFR of 1.97
Indigenous mothers for non-Indigenous
(average over 10 years mothers (average over
to mid-2001) Proportion 10 years to mid-2001)
of babies to non- Proportion of babies
Indigenous mothers to Indigenous mothers
identified as Indigenous identified as non-
increases to 6.9 per Indigenous held
cent by 2030-31 constant at 0.7 per
cent
Mortality Linear increases to 68.0 87.0 and 83.3 years
and 73.9 years by 2030- by 2030-31 for males
31 for males and females and females
respectively respectively (ABS
2004-based national
assumptions)
Interstate migration Net -85 per annum Net -915 per annum
(to give -1000 per
annum for the NT;
based on judgement)
International migration Zero Net 736 per annum
(average over 10
years to mid-2001)
Identification change No Indigenous to non- Limited non-
Indigenous change Indigenous to
Indigenous change,
equivalent to 0.2 per
cent per annum (error
of closure over the
1996-2001 intercensal
period)
Table 8: Estimating the 1996-2001* error of closure for the NT
Indigenous population
Component of change Value
Experimental ERP, mid-1996** 51,876
Registered births to Indigenous mothers 6,504
Proportion Indigenous infants (Table 6) 0.993
Indigenous births to Indigenous mothers = 6,504 x 0.993 = 6,458
Registered births to non-Indigenous mothers 11,621
Proportion Indigenous infants (Table 6) 0.038
Indigenous births to non-Indigenous mothers = 11,621 x 0.038 = 442
Total Indigenous births*** = 6,458 + 442 = 6,900
Registered deaths 2,077
Census net interstate migration -426
Assumed net international migration 0
Mid-2001 rolled-forward population = 51,876 + 6,900 -
2,077 - 426 = 56,273
Experimental ERP, mid-2001 56,875
Error of closure = 56,875 - 56,273 = 602
Sources: ABS, NTID database
* Between 30 June 1996 and 30 June 2001
** This is the experimental ERP based on the 1996 Census, not the
revised 1996 ERP based on the 2001 Census.
*** An alternative would be to use 7,022, the number of Indigenous
births in NTID database calculated by reverse projection. It would give
an error of closure of 480.
Table 9: Projections of the NT Indigenous population, 2001 to 2031
Annual average percentage
growth rate over the per cent of
Population previous five years NT population
2001 56,875 1.82 28.8
2006 62,669 1.94 30.5
2011 68,738 1.85 31.3
2016 75,332 1.83 32.1
2021 82,467 1.81 33.0
2026 90,045 1.76 33.8
2031 98,052 1.70 34.5
Source: Authors' calculations
Table 10: Projected changes in the NT Indigenous population by broad age
group, 2001-31
Absolute Percentage
2001 2016 2031 change change
Age group population population population 2001-31 2001-31
0-4 6,869 8,631 10,488 3,619 52.7
5-14 13,480 15,508 19,103 5,623 41.7
15-24 11,445 14,303 16,537 5,092 44.5
25-44 16,990 22,102 28,539 11,550 68.0
45-64 6,516 11,971 17,433 10,918 167.6
65+ 1,576 2,817 5,951 4,375 277.6
Total 56,875 75,332 98,052 41,177 72.4
Per cent of age group Per cent of age group
Age group Indigenous 2001 Indigenous 2031
0-4 39.0 43.6
5-14 40.1 45.1
15-24 37.0 41.0
25-44 24.4 31.2
45-64 16.8 28.2
65+ 21.3 24.9
Total 28.8 34.5
Sources: ABS, authors' projections
Table 11: Comparison with ABS experimental projections of the NT
Indigenous population, 2001 to 2009
Authors' ABS low ABS high
projections series series
2001 56,875 56,875 56,875
2002 58,106 57,758 57,888
2003 59,250 58,634 58,895
2004 60,442 59,508 59,899
2005 61,514 60,373 60,896
2006 62,669 61,232 61,886
2007 63,843 62,085 62,870
2008 65,035 62,932 63,848
2009 66,247 63,775 64,820
Sources: Authors' projections, ABS
Table 12: Factors affecting future population change included in each of
the projections
Above- Net
Young age Rising life replacement interstate
Projection structure expectancy fertility migration
1. Standard [check] [check] [check] [check]
2. Mixed parentage [check] [check] [check] [check]
3. Migration [check] [check] [check] [check]
4. Natural [check] [check] [check]
5. Replacement [check] [check]
6. Momentum [check]
Mixed parentage Changing
Projection childbearing identification
1. Standard [check] [check]
2. Mixed parentage [check]
3. Migration
4. Natural
5. Replacement
6. Momentum