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Migration in the last 5 years – focus on Victoria
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http://blog.id.com.au/2011/demographics/migration-victoria/
So where is everyone going? The majority of new migrants settle in Melbourne, and areas which already have a large amount of cultural diversity tend to gain the largest numbers.
The City of Greater Dandenong (14,700) – Already with more than half the population born overseas, Greater Dandenong (which includes the highly diverse area of Springvale) continues to attract the most migrants. While Vietnam is the number 1 country of origin of the current residents, it was only the 4th largest migrant groups. India (3,630) and Sri Lanka (1,765) were the top 2, both mostly skilled migrants, followed by Afghanistan (1,142, mostly humanitarian). 75 countries of birth are represented in Greater Dandenong’s 2006-2011 migration alone. Unfortunately Greater Dandenong is one of only two Melbourne metro councils who do not have a .id community profile.
The City of Monash (13,267) – A fairly affluent area increasingly popular with migrants upgrading their homes, and also students wanting to be near the university. Monash has had rapidly increasing cultural diversity for the last 20 years. In 1991 the proportion of overseas born was about the Melbourne average, but by 2006 was much higher and has certainly continued to grow. The largest countries of origin are China (4,550), India (2,200), Sri Lanka (1,350) and Malaysia (900).
The City of Casey (13,212) – Now Victoria’s largest population LGA and still growing strongly, in recent years it has gained a lot of cultural diversity from people upgrading their homes from nearby Greater Dandenong. Now it looks like many migrants are moving straight to Casey. Migration into this area is dominated by the subcontinent, India (2,900) and Sri Lanka (1,730), followed by Afghanistan (1,500), China (1,000 and the Philippines (800).
The City of Wyndham (11,048) – Victoria’s fastest growing area, which is adding around 10-12,000 people annually, so overseas migration makes up a relatively small part of this. Most of the growth is due to people moving within metro Melbourne, and births. The largest numbers of overseas arrivals to Wyndham are from (India (2,700), China (1,050), Philippines (1,000), the UK (800) and Burma (770).
The City of Brimbank (10,920) – Another of Melbourne’s most diverse areas, in the western suburbs. Brinbank’s largest group of migrants was from India (2,200), followed by Vietnam (1,800 – almost all family reunion migration, due to the large existing Vietnamese population) and the Philippines (1,100)
The City of Whitehorse (9,353) – Another area with rapidly increasing cultural diversity in recent years, the middle ring eastern suburbs of Box Hill, Blackburn, Nunawading etc. Whitehorse’s migrants are dominated by China (3,900 – second only to Monash), followed by India (1,300), Malaysia (600) and Sri Lanka (400).
These are followed by Melbourne (8,528), Boroondara (7,680), Hume (7,449), Glen Eira (7,037) and Moreland (6,969).
Some areas without particularly large migrant intakes overall, nevertheless receive large numbers of specific migrant groups. In some cases, these are refugee groups coming in via the humanitarian stream. These include regional areas like Geelong, Shepparton and Bendigo, where the humanitarian stream makes up more than one-third of all migrants (remember it’s about 9% for Victoria overall).
什么都不想说,自己看数据吧。。。 |
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