Australian Government - Department of Immigration and Citizenship

Senator Chris Evans

Minister for Immigration and Citizenship

Australia’s brain drain biggest on record

Tuesday 7 October 2008

The Minister for Immigration and Citizenship, Senator Chris Evans, released a new report today that shows Australia experienced its biggest annual exodus on record with 76 923 people leaving the country permanently in 2007-08.

The Emigration 2007-2008 report reveals that almost half the Australian residents that left permanently were in skilled jobs and nearly two thirds were aged between 25 and 54.

A further 102 066 Australian residents left the country for a year or more with more than 55 per cent in professional occupations or trades.

Senator Evans said the data showed that emigration played a significant role in Australia’s current skills shortage.

‘Historically high numbers of our young, highly skilled people are moving overseas to live and work,’ Senator Evans said.

‘The 76 923 people that departed Australia permanently in 2007-08 represents a 6.7 per cent increase on the previous year and a 325 per cent increase on the low of 18 100 people who left permanently in 1985-86.

‘These latest figures also reflect the current global demand for skills and the internationalisation of the labour market as part of the broader process of globalisation.’

Other key findings in the report include:

The Emigration 2007-2008 report is based on information from passenger cards supplied to the Department of Immigration and Citizenship on arrival in and departure from Australia and supplemented from passenger and visa information systems.

Although there were 149 635 permanent settler arrivals in 2007-08, the net gain (arrivals minus permanent departures) was the tenth highest recorded.
See: Emigration 2007-2008 (395KB PDF file)


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Index of Media Releases

URL: http://www.minister.immi.gov.au /media/media-releases/2008/ce08098.htm
Last update: 07 October 2008 at 13:57 AEST