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Country profile: Australia


Country profile: Australia

Map of Australia



Modern Australia was founded with the influx of European settlers just over two hundred years ago, but the Aborigines inhabited the island continent for tens of thousands of years before that.

They numbered a few hundred thousand before the European influx. But two centuries of discrimination and expropriation followed, and at one point the indigenous population fell as low as 60,000.

Australia’s politicians at first looked to Europe and the US in foreign policy, but in the past 20 years or so they have made their near neighbours a priority.


Overview

Australia has mediated between warring groups in Papua New Guinea and the Solomon Islands and deployed thousands of peacekeepers in newly-independent East Timor.

AT-A-GLANCE
Sydney skyline, including Opera House
Politics: The Labor Party, under Kevin Rudd, won a landslide victory in elections in November 2007, ending more than 11 years in power for the Liberal Party under John Howard.
Economy: The strong, services-based economy has seen sustained growth; mining and agriculture provide the lion’s share of exports
International: Australia is a regional policeman; further afield, its troops are in Iraq and Afghanistan

Its economy is now also geared to Asia. It is a foremost member of Apec, the Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation forum, and aims to forge free trade deals with China and Asean, the Association of Southeast Asian Nations.

The British founded the first settlement in 1788 and named it Sydney. Many of the first settlers were convicts. Free settlers arrived in increasing numbers, particularly after the discovery of gold in the mid-19th century.

Today, 99% of the population are of European or Asian descent.

The government formally apologised in 2008 for the past wrongs committed against the indigenous Aboriginal population.

Indigenous Australians suffer high rates of unemployment, imprisonment and drug abuse.

The gradual dismantling of the “White Australia” immigration policy in the decades after World War II heralded an increase in the number of non-European arrivals.

Migration continues to shape Australia and is a politically-sensitive issue. The country has taken a tough stance on unauthorised arrivals, but has scrapped a controversial policy of holding asylum seekers in detention centres until their cases are heard.

The island continent combines a wide variety of landscapes. These include deserts in the interior, hills and mountains, tropical rainforests, and densely-populated coastal strips with long beaches and coral reefs off the shoreline.

Isolated from other continents, Australia has an abundance of unique plant and animal life.



Facts



  • Full name: Commonwealth of Australia
  • Population: 20.7 million (UN, 2007)
  • Capital: Canberra
  • Largest city: Sydney
  • Area: 7.7 million sq km (2.9 million sq miles)
  • Major language: English
  • Major religion: Christianity
  • Life expectancy: 79 years (men), 84 years (women) (UN)
  • Monetary unit: 1 Australian dollar = 100 cents
  • Main exports: Ores and metals; wool, food and live animals; fuels, transport machinery and equipment
  • GNI per capita: US $32,220 (World Bank, 2006)
  • Internet domain: .au
  • International dialling code: +61




Leaders

Head of state: Queen Elizabeth II, represented by Governor-General Quentin Bryce

Prime minister: Kevin Rudd

Kevin Rudd and his Labor Party swept to power in elections in November 2007, ending more than 11 years of conservative rule.

Kevin Rudd

Kevin Rudd, Mandarin-speaking former diplomat

Mr Rudd, a Mandarin-speaking former diplomat, put global warming and keeping Autstralia’s export-fueled economic boom at the top of his priorities.

His first official act was to ratify the Kyoto Protocol on climate change, which he said demonstrated his government’s commitment to tackling greenhouse gas emissions.

His predecessor, John Howard, leader of the Liberal Party, had always rejected ratification.

Mr Rudd promised to quickly overturn several of Mr Howard’s key policies, including controversial labour laws, and Australia’s military deployment to Iraq.

A few months into his premiership, the government made a formal apology for the past wrongs caused by successive governments on the indigenous Aboriginal population. Mr Rudd also reversed Australia’s longstanding policy of detaining all asylum seekers upon arrival.

He presented himself to voters as a new-generation leader and was expected to forge closer ties with China and other Asian nations than Mr Howard. He worked in Australia’s Beijing embassy in the 1980s.

Mr Howard, who was in office for four terms, said he was bequeathing a nation which was “stronger, prouder and more prosperous” than it had been when he came to power.


Media

Australia’s media scene is creatively, technologically and economically advanced. There is a tradition of public broadcasting, but privately-owned TV and radio enjoy the lion’s share of listening and viewing.

Sydney Morning Herald newspaper
Media ownership rules have been relaxed

Ownership of print and broadcast media is highly-concentrated. For example, four major media groups own 80% of Australia’s newspaper titles.

The Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC) runs national and local public radio and TV stations as well as Australia Network, a TV service for the Asia-Pacific region. The other main public broadcaster is the Special Broadcasting Service (SBS), whose radio and TV networks broadcast in many languages.

National commercial TV is dominated by three large networks. Commercial broadcasters have to carry a minimum percentage of Australian-made programming. Pay-TV services have gained a substantial foothold. Digital TV is available via satellite, cable and terrestrially.

Sport, news, game shows, imported and home-made dramas top the TV ratings in Australia. The industry has successfully exported some of its productions to English-speaking markets overseas.

More than 70% of Australians use the internet.

The John Howard government changed the regulations governing media ownership. The rules, introduced in 2007, allow for greater cross-ownership of press and TV outlets as well as higher levels of foreign ownership.

The press

Television

Radio

  • ABC – public, operates speech-cultural network Radio National, news station ABC NewsRadio, youth-oriented Triple J, classical and contemporary music network ABC Classic FM and local-regional services
  • Radio Australia – ABC’s external service, targeted at Asia-Pacific region via shortwave and internet
  • SBS Radio – national multicultural, multilingual public network, broadcasts in 68 languages
  • Australian Communications and Media Authority (ACMA) – licenses and regulates radio stations; station lists available

News agency/internet

  • AAP – Australian Associated Press
  • ABC Newsonline – public broadcaster ABC’s news site

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