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This article was published in Australian Demographic Statistics, June Quarter 1999 (ABS Catalogue number 3101.0) DECEMBER 1999
Living
alone is projected to be an increasingly common living arrangement
in Australia. ABS Household and Family Projections (Cat. no. 3236.0)
indicate that there could be as many as 2.4 million to 3.4 million
people living alone by the year 2021, an increase of between 52%
and 113%, from the 1996 level of 1.6 million. This large projected
increase in the number of people living alone reflects projected
changes in the size and age structure of the population by 2021,
and changes in living arrangement trends over time. The number of people projected to live alone varies between each of the three projection series. The three series are based on varying assumptions about trends in living arrangements. In Series A the pattern of living arrangements of individuals is the same as in 1996. Thus any difference between the number of people living alone in 1996 and 2021 in Series A is solely a result of the change in the size and age structure of the projected population. In Series B and C, recent trends in the patterns of living arrangements are incorporated into the projections. In Series B the average annual rate of change in living arrangements experienced between 1986 and 1996 is applied in reducing levels (in full between 1996 and 2001, in fractions to 2011, and is then held constant to 2021). In Series C the rate of change experienced between 1986 and 1996 is applied in full throughout the projection period.
More
women live alone than men although the age profile of lone women
differs from that of lone men. For women, living alone peaks in
the older age groups. In 1996, 51% of lone women were aged over
65 years. This proportion is projected to be 58% in Series A, 54%
in Series B, and 46% in Series C. The three series also differ in
terms of the proportion of younger women who live alone. Women aged
40-59 years are projected to represent 19% of women living alone
in Series A, 22% in Series B, and 27% in Series C in 2021, compared
with 21% in 1996. Welcome
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