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SOCIAL AND ECONOMIC OVERVIEW

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Title: SOCIAL AND ECONOMIC OVERVIEW


1
SOCIAL AND ECONOMIC OVERVIEW OF WESTERN
AUSTRALIA implications for public sector
education
2
economy
  • Rich State
  • Growing rapidly
  • Expansion of commodity extraction and processing
  • New industry sectors developing
  • Service industries to outpace other sectors
  • Structure of growth impacts on skill demand

3
employment and working-life
  • Female paid labour market participation
    increasing
  • Male labour market participation down
  • Huge increases in part-time casual employment
  • More people working long hours (gt50hrs)
  • Long hours impacts on health, family,
    relationships

4
youth labour market
  • Skill-biased structural change hit youth
    employment
  • - technology
  • - micro-economic reform
  • - trade
  • Increased part-time, decrease in full-time
    employment
  • Increased retention rates
  • Unemployment and underemployment higher for youth
  • Duration of unemployment lower for youth
  • 1 in 7.5 of youth labour force unemployed
  • - (1 in 11.5 all youth)
  • 1 in 20 not in full-time education, training or
    LF

5
unemployment, joblessness, disadvantage
  • Unemployment lowest in 25 years (lt 5)
  • High unemployment among some groups
  • - NESB (DCALB)
  • - Indigenous Australians
  • - mature-aged
  • - some specific groups of youth (defined by
    where they live)
  • Australia among highest jobless household rates
    in OECD
  • - 752,000 children living in households where no
    adult works
  • - 2/3 raised in (unemployed) female sole parent
    households
  • - govt schools have greatest share of these
    children
  • - impact on job knowledge career expectations?

6
unemployment by occupation
7
Socioeconomic status
  • Approx 250 households in census districts -
  • i.e. neighbourhoods
  • These have been ranked for metro by SES
  • SES indicator of disadvantage
  • - eg low income, low education, high
    unemployment, etc
  • 10th decile the bottom 10 of households, 1st
    best
  • Have a consistent panel of neighborhoods across 3
    census periods (1991, 1996, 2001)
  • If neighbourhood ranked 10 in 1991, same
    throughout (for consistency)

8
2001 socioeconomic distribution of youth
unemployment
9
decade of disadvantage
10
population ageing
  • Baby boomers approaching retirement
  • Labour force growth rates set to stagnate (i.e.
    zero growth)
  • Static (possibly declining) youth cohort
    projected into the future
  • The implications felt in school enrolments and
    federal budget forward planning (already)
  • implications for the type of goods and services -
    and hence skills that are in demand in the
    economy

11
projected school-age cohort
12
indigenous australians
  • Over-represented in every dimension of well-being
  • Third world living standards, health status,
    education levels
  • Relatively small share of population
  • Large share of some education districts (eg
    Kimberly Pilbara)
  • Very young population 57 below 24 years in
    2001
  • This makes DET the critical government agency
    for indigenous policy in this State it must be
    at the centre of capacity building initiatives
    for communities

13
indigenous australians
  • 48 Aboriginal people 1519 years not in formal
    education
  • CDEP employment 25 of total employment
    critical pathway
  • CDEP detrimental to mainstream education in urban
    areas
  • Employment prospects 23 higher in urban areas
    with post-secondary qualification
  • No transition from school to mainstream local
    employment
  • main transition dependence on welfare and
    CDEP payments

14
indigenous australians
  • to circumvent inter-generational welfare
    dependence there needs to be an immediate
    targeted policy and program support for this
    group before they enter the welfare system that
    is, it must start at school.

15
school resourcing
  • USO drives up cost of public education
  • - majority of indigenous students (location,
    language, performance, community relations,
    retention, health, disadvantage)
  • disadvantaged backgrounds affect public outcomes
  • Independent schools gt30 metro secondary students
    richest 10 of neighbourhoods
  • For every 100 put into public sector, 35 flows
    to non-government sector (irrespective of need)
  • Even with no increase in funding levels to the
    government sector, a decrease in enrolments means
    the average cost of schooling increases this
    drives up non-government

16
socioeconomic distribution of students
17
sector share by socioeconomic decile
18
regional enrolments
19
sole parent households
20
Half-million kids brought up by single welfare
mums Emma-Kate Symons, Social affairs
writer September 23, 2004
  • the proportion of Australian children growing up
    in jobless households headed by single parents --
    overwhelmingly single mothers -- jumped by 7 per
    cent.
  • That meant that a total of 482,100 children, or
    almost two-thirds of children in families where
    no parent works, were being raised by unemployed
    mothers.
  • Fifteen per cent of Australian children, or
    753,600 children, were in families where no
    parent worked.
  • Only 52 per cent of single parents are employed,
    and of those just over half are in full-time
    work.
  • Almost half of couple families with a child aged
    2 or under have both parents in the workforce,
    and 60 per cent of all couple families with
    dependent children have two parents who work.
  • Single parents with children earn less than half
    the household income of couples with children --
    a median weekly income of 412, compared with
    1167.
  • "Then there is the poverty trap issue. By the
    time you pay your childcare and other costs, the
    return from a low-paid job is very poor."
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