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闲来无事,还真找到统计数字了。06年的,有点老,4年过去了,算一个增加量,30%, 8万大陆中国人吧.算算吧,和我统计的基本一样
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chinese_Australian
According to the 2006 Australian Census, 206,591 Australians declared they were born in China (excludes SARs and Republic of China (Taiwan))[5]. A further 71,803 declared they were born in the Hong Kong SAR, 2,013 in the Macau SAR and 24,368 in the Taiwan Province[5]: a total of 304,775 or 1.5% of those counted by the Census.[1] Chinese ancestry was claimed by 669,896, either alone or with another ancestry, and Taiwanese ancestry was claimed by 5,837 persons.[2] The 2001 Australian Census reported that Chinese was the sixth most common self-reported ancestry.[6] Just under 40% of those claiming Chinese ancestry were born in mainland China, Hong Kong or Taiwan; 26% were born in Australia with other notable birth places being Malaysia (10%) and Vietnam (8%).[6]
Chinese Australians have historically been of predominately Cantonese descent. Due to recent immigration from other regions of mainland China and Taiwan, Mandarin and other Chinese languages are increasingly spoken as well. The Australian Bureau of Statistics lists 225,300 speakers of Cantonese (40.4% of Chinese Australians), followed by Mandarin at 139,300 (25.0%) and other Chinese languages 36,700.[7] Second or higher generation Chinese Australians are either monolingual in English or bilingual to varying degrees with Chinese.
In Sydney there were 292,338 persons, or approximately 7% of the population, who identified themselves as having Chinese ancestry (either exclusively or with another ancestry). Other Australian cities with large Chinese populations include Melbourne (182,550 or 5.1%), Perth (53,390 or 3.7%) and Brisbane (50,908 or 2.9%).[8] 53% of mainland China-born and 51% of Hong Kong born residents were enumerated in Sydney, while the largest portion of Taiwanese-born residents are in Brisbane (34%). |
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