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Expatriate Australian

Australian diaspora
Flag of Australia.svg
Regions with significant populations
Australian diaspora 1,000,000
 United Kingdom 400,000
 United States 200,000
 European Union
(Greece, Italy, Germany, Netherlands, Ireland, France, Portugal, Spain, Poland)
100,000
 Greece 100,000 (Greek Australians)
 China 100,000
 New Zealand 70,000
 Canada 35,000
 Italy 30,000 (20,000 Italian Australians)
 Lebanon 20,000–25,000 (Lebanese Australians)
 Vietnam 22,000
 Singapore 20,000
 Thailand 20,000
 United Arab Emirates 16,000
 China 15,000
 Germany 15,000
 Netherlands 15,000
 Papua New Guinea 15,000
 Turkey 12,000
 Indonesia 12,000
 Japan 11,000
 Ireland 10,000
 South Africa 8,000
 Israel 7,000
 South Korea 7,000
 Taiwan 7,000
 Philippines 6,000
 France 5,500
 Saudi Arabia 5,000
  Switzerland 5,000
 Qatar 4,500
 Cambodia 3,000–5,000
 Malaysia 4,700
 India 3,000–4,000

The term Australian diaspora refers to the approximately 1,000,000 Australian citizens (approximately 5% of the population) who today live outside Australia. The largest percentage of Australian expats (48%) are based in Europe, and the next largest percentage (24%) are in Asia. The Trans-Tasman Travel Arrangement enables Australians and New Zealanders to migrate between Australia and New Zealand.

Australian diaspora may also be used to refer to the population of Indigenous Australians who have been displaced within Australia – from their traditional homelands by colonisation, or from their families by child removal policies.

A survey in 2002 of Australians who were emigrating found that most were leaving for employment reasons.

For the period 1999–2003, it was estimated that there were 346,000 Australian-born people living in other OECD countries: of these 96,900 lived in the United Kingdom, 65,200 lived in the United States and 42,000 lived in New Zealand.

The term Australian diaspora was used in reference to Australian citizens living abroad in a 2003 Committee for Economic Development of Australia (CEDA) research report, "Australia's Diaspora: Its Size, Nature and Policy Implications". This report both identified the phenomenon and argued for an Australian government policy of maintaining active contact with the diaspora. The term has been picked up by others.

In 2005, Senate Legal and Constitutional References Committee (a standing committee) reported into the issue of Expatriate Australians and made recommendations that the "Australian Government needs to make greater efforts to connect with and engage our expatriate community".

The diaspora has been the focus of policy concerns over a so-called "brain drain" from Australia. However, the 2003 CEDA report argued the phenomenon was essentially positive: rather than experiencing a "brain drain", Australia was in fact seeing both "brain circulation" as Australians added to their skills and expertise, and a "brain gain", as these skilled expatriates tended to return to Australia and new skilled immigrants were arriving. Between 1999 and 2003, there were seven highly educated migrants to Australia for every one highly educated Australian who was living elsewhere in countries within the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD). Levels of skilled immigration to Australia reflect Government policies to "practise a selective immigration policy based on human capital criteria".


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