Glenn unpacks the most recent population projections from the ABS, explaining how projections are different to forecasts, and why there is a role for both in planning.
Last week, the ABS released their latest population projections for Australia and for each state and territory.
These were last done in 2012, and are normally produced after each Census, to give an idea of where the nation is headed. This set goes out to 2066, a 50-year timeframe from the previous Census.
The heading to this blog post and all the ABS data projections have one thing in common: they produce projections in several “series”. 3 of them to be precise, based on a different set of assumptions; A, B and C – a high, medium and low series.
The ABS is at pains to point out that these projections are not in any way a forecast or a prediction. They are what might happen to Australia’s population based on an arbitrary set of parameters around migration, birth and death rates.
Migration is the main driver as this accounts for around 2/3rds of Australia’s population growth at the moment. And it’s the most susceptible to change.
So a projection is based on extending and modifying past growth rates into the future. And the ABS projections have 3 series, plus a number of other supplementary series based on varying assumptions. So it’s likely that at least one of them will come close to reality. The difficulty is if you’re planning for future populations, which would you choose?
A forecast is quite different. .id’s future population calculations are forecasts. We produce forecasts of the most likely future population, age structure and household type, with a single series over the next 25 years.
Our forecasts are still based on assumptions, but the assumptions take quite a different form. And we don’t always get it exactly right either, but we rely on regularly monitoring and reviewing the underlying assumptions that we use to model our forecasts to keep them relevant.
So the ABS population projections are interesting as a “What if?” scenario. But they don’t give you the detailed evidence to make decisions about your future population, certainly not at a local level.
I sometimes liken our population forecast to a weather forecast.
A “Weather projection” would say: It was 25 degrees and sunny today. The last time it was 25 degrees and sunny on a day, it was 27 degrees and sunny the next day, and 21 degrees and raining the following day, so that becomes the prediction.
A “Weather forecast” which is what we’re more familiar with looks at the underlying drivers of weather – eg. cold fronts and low-pressure systems and tracks these to provide a local forecast, which is usually provided a week out, but then tracked and updated every day. This is more like our population forecasts.
But we do look at the overall projections for the country. They can certainly give you an insight into larger areas and also longer timeframes than our forecasts can produce. And of course, they are a great talking point about the future of population in this country.