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Australia (/streli/, /-/, colloquially /-j/),[10][11] officially the Commonwealth of Australia,[12] is

an Oceanian country comprising the mainland of the Australian continent, the island of Tasmania,
and numerous smaller islands. It is the world's sixth-largest country by total area. Neighboring
countries include Papua New Guinea, Indonesia and East Timor to the north; the Solomon
Islands and Vanuatu to the north-east; and New Zealand to the south-east.

Capital

Canberra
3518.48S 1497.47E

Largest city

Sydney

Official languages

None[N 2]

National language

English[N 2]
Australian

Demonym

Government

Aussie[3][4]
Federal parliamentaryconstitution
al monarchy

Monarch

Elizabeth II

Governor-General

Sir Peter Cosgrove

Prime Minister

Malcolm Turnbull

Chief Justice

Robert French

Legislature

Parliament

Upper house

Senate

Lower house

House of Representatives

Independence from the United Kingdom


Federation,Constitutio

1 January 1901

-n
Statute of Westminster
- Adoption Act

9 October 1942 (with effect


from 3 September 1939)

Australia Act

3 March 1986

Area
Total
-

7,692,024 km2 (6th)


2,969,907 sq mi

Population
2015 estimate

23,906,800[5] (51st)

2011 census

21,507,717[6]

Density

2.8/km2 (233rd)

7.3/sq mi

GDP (PPP)

2015 estimate

Total

$1.137 trillion[7] (19th)

Per capita

$47,608[7] (17th)

GDP (nominal)

2015 estimate

Total

$1.252 trillion[7] (12th)

Per capita

$52,454[7] (9th)

Gini (2012)

33.6[8]
medium 19th

HDI (2013)

0.933[9]
very high 2nd

Currency

History

Australian dollar (AUD)

The first inhabitants of Australia were the Aborigines, who migrated there at least 40,000 years ago from
Southeast Asia. There may have been between a half million to a full million Aborigines at the time of
European settlement; today about 350,000 live in Australia.
Dutch, Portuguese, and Spanish ships sighted Australia in the 17th century; the Dutch landed at the Gulf
of Carpentaria in 1606. In 1616 the territory became known as New Holland. The British arrived in 1688,
but it was not until Captain James Cook's voyage in 1770 that Great Britain claimed possession of the
vast island, calling it New South Wales. A British penal colony was set up at Port Jackson (what is now
Sydney) in 1788, and about 161,000 transported English convicts were settled there until the system was
suspended in 1839.
Free settlers and former prisoners established six colonies: New South Wales (1786), Tasmania (then
Van Diemen's Land) (1825), Western Australia (1829), South Australia (1834), Victoria (1851), and
Queensland (1859). Various gold rushes attracted settlers, as did the mining of other minerals. Sheep
farming and grain soon grew into important economic enterprises. The six colonies became states and in
1901 federated into the Commonwealth of Australia with a constitution that incorporated British
parliamentary and U.S. federal traditions. Australia became known for its liberal legislation: free
compulsory education, protected trade unionism with industrial conciliation and arbitration, the secret
ballot, women's suffrage, maternity allowances, and sickness and old-age pensions.

The First Convicts Transported To Australia

During the 17th century and 18th century European


explorers reached Australia. In 1770 Captain Cook
claimed eastern Australia for Britain. He called it New
South Wales.
Life was hard for ordinary people in the 18th century and
punishments for even minor crimes were severe. In
England you could be hanged for more than 200 different
offences. However as an alternative to hanging prisoners
were sometimes sentenced to transportation. In the 18th
century convicts were transported to Virginia and Maryland
in what is now the USA. Transportation was a relatively

humane punishment. At any rate it was better than


hanging!
However after the American War of Independence (17751783) this was no longer possible and the government
began looking for a new destination for transportees. In
1786 it was decided to send them to Botany Bay.
Getting rid of undesirable members of society may not
have been the sole motive for founding a colony in
Australia. The British may have hoped to found a naval
base in the Pacific. They also hoped Australia would be a
source of timber and flax.
At any rate on 13 May 1787 a fleet of 11 ships set sail from
Portsmouth. On board were 759 convicts, most of them
men with sailors and marines to guard the prisoners.
Captain Arthur Philip commanded them. With them they
took seeds, farm implements, livestock such as cattle,
sheep, pigs, goats, horses and chickens and 2 years
supply of food. The first colonists came ashore at Port
Jackson on 26 January 1788.
At first things were difficult for the colonists and food was
short although Phillip sent a ship to South Africa for more
provisions which returned in May 1789. Food was rationed
and the rations were anything but generous. However
things gradually improved. A second fleet arrived in 1790
and a third fleet came in 1791. At first the settlers lived in
simple wooden huts but later convicts made bricks for
houses.

Captain Phillip left Australia in December 1792. When he


returned to England he took samples of Australian plants
and animals. He also took two indigenous people.
At first convicts worked on government land for provisions
but from 1793 those who behaved well were freed and
given grants of land. Also the first free settlers arrived in
1793. Although hopes of growing flax in Australia came to
nothing but whales were hunted in the Pacific and seals
were hunted in the Bass Strait.
Australia In The Early 19th Century
Relatively few new people were sent to Australia during the long wars with
France from 1793 to 1815 because the war at sea made that difficult.
Nevertheless the colony continued to grow. The second governor of Australia
was John Hunter 1795-1800. He was followed by Philip King 1800-1806.
Under King the first colonists settled in Van Diemens Land (Tasmania) in
1803. In 1804 a new settlement was founded at Newcastle for convicts who
committed a second offence.
In 1813 Europeans discovered a pass through the Blue Mountains. That
enabled them to spread inland. Berrima was founded in 1829. Bathurst and
Goulburn followed it in 1833. By 1825 the White population of Australia was
about 25,000 while Tasmania had a population of about 4,500. Transportation
to New South Wales ended in 1840. Transportation to Australia ended
completely in 1868. Meanwhile the system of granting land to people ended in
1831. From then on land in Australia was sold.
Early Rebellions in Australia
However all did not go smoothly in Australia at the beginning of the 19th
century. In March 1804 some Irish convicts led by Philip Cunningham took
part in a rebellion at Castle Hill. On 4 March they captured a convict station at
Parramatta. The next day they fought a 'battle' with government soldiers. As a
result the rebellion quickly collapsed and the ringleaders were hanged.
A second rebellion, the rum rebellion occurred in 1808. William Bligh, famous
captain of the Bounty, was made governor in 1806. At that time rum was used

as currency in Australia. Bligh forbade this. However on 26 January 1808 a


group of soldiers led by Major George Johnston arrested Bligh. He was held
prisoner for over a year until he finally agreed to leave Australia. However
soon after he set sail Bligh decided to return. In 1809 the British government
decided to replace Bligh and in 1810 he was succeeded by Colonel
Macquarie.
Australian Sheep
In 1797 Merino sheep were brought to Australia. The number of sheep in
Australia quickly boomed. There was a huge demand for their wool in
England. By 1820 there 100,000 sheep in Australia. By 1830 the figure had
reached 1 million. There were 1 million sheep in Tasmania. By 1850 there
were 13 million sheep in New South Wales. By 1850 half of all wool woven in
Britain came from Australia/Tasmania.
The Growth of Tasmania
In 1798 George Bass and Matthew Flinders sailed through the straits and
proved that Van Diemen's land was separate from mainland Australia. The
first settlers arrived in Van Diemen's Land (Tasmania) in 1803. Launceston
was founded in 1805. Hobart was founded in 1804 and Launceston was
founded in 1805. In the 19th century there was a whaling industry in Bass
Strait. There were also seal hunters until the 1830s. An important shipbuilding
industry also grew up in Hobart in the mid-19th century. In 1825 Tasmania was
separated from Australia for administrative purposes. Transportation to
Tasmania ended in 1853.
In the 1870s tin was discovered in Tasmania and a new industry grew up. In
the 1890s copper mining in Tasmania boomed. The population of Tasmania
grew rapidly. From only about 4,500 in 1820 it grew to 57,000 in 1861 and
115,000 in 1881. The University of Tasmania was founded in 1890.
Indigenous Tasmanians
In 1803 there may have been about 8,000 people in Tasmania. Europeans
killed many especially during the 'Black War' of the 1820s. Others died of
diseases introduced by Europeans. The 'warfare' between Europeans and
indigenous people began in 1804 with the 'battle' of Risdon Cove. About 300
indigenous people stumbled onto a European camp while hunting kangaroo
and soldiers fired at them. Many more indigenous Tasmanians were killed in
the ensuing years.

The Governor of Tasmania from 1824 to 1837 was George Arthur. In the years
1828 to 1832 he declared martial law hoping to end the warfare between
Europeans and indigenous people. In 1830 he ordered all able-bodied white
men to form a line across Tasmania and sweep across it forcing all the
remaining indigenous people onto the Tasman Peninsula. However this move,
known as the Black Line, failed.
Eventually a preacher named George Robinson agreed to try and persuade
the remaining indigenous people to go to a reservation on Flinders Island. The
surviving people agreed to go there. However they continued to die of disease
and in 1847 the few survivors were allowed back onto Tasmania.
New Colonies In Australia
Meanwhile European settlement spread to other parts of Australia. Brisbane
was founded in 1825. Western Australia was founded in 1829. The city of
Perth was founded that year.
In 1834 a man named John Batman decided the site of Melbourne was a
good place to found a settlement. In 1835 he made a treaty with the
Indigenous Australians in which he gave them trade goods for land. However
the treaty was not recognised by the British government, which disregarded it.
Nevertheless the city of Melbourne was laid out on the land in a grid pattern.
In 1836 another colony was founded at Port Adelaide, which grew into South
Australia. The city of Adelaide was planned by Colonel William Light (17861839) the first Surveyor General of Australia.
After 1815 thousands of new settlers arrived in Australia every year fleeing
poverty in Britain. By 1840 the white population of Australia was about
160,000. By 1851 it was about 430,000. Meanwhile explorers such as Charles
Sturt 1795-1869 and Thomas Mitchell 1792-1855 explored the interior of
Australia.
In 1851 Victoria was made a separate state from New South Wales.
Queensland grew from a settlement at Moreton Bay, which was founded in
1824. Queensland became independent in 1859.
War With The Indigenous Australians

When the first convicts and their guards were sent to Australia they were
enjoined to 'live in amity and kindness' with the Indigenous Australians. That of
course did not happen. The Europeans came to drive the indigenous people
off their land. Naturally the Indigenous Australians resented this and fought
back. However there were no pitched battles between Europeans and
Indigenous Australians. The indigenous people fought 'hit and run' raids and
parties of Europeans went out to kill Indigenous Australians.
One of the leaders of indigenous resistance was Pemulwuy who fought the
British from 1790 to 1802. However he was eventually shot. European
diseases such as smallpox, influenza and measles to which they had no
resistance also devastated the Indigenous Australians. Intermittent 'warfare'
between Europeans and indigenous people continued for decades. As the
Europeans took more and more of the indigenous people's hunting land for
sheep tension grew and violence flared. Indigenous Australians sometimes
attacked settlers and took sheep. In retaliation Europeans sometimes
massacred Indigenous Australians.
One such massacre happened on 9 June 1838 when a group of 12
Europeans massacred a group of 28 indigenous men, women and children
who were peacefully camped near a hut belonging to 2 convicts. Of the 12
men 11 were brought to justice. At their first trial all 11 men were acquitted.
However 7 were re-tried, found guilty and hung. It was rare for settlers to be
prosecuted for killing Indigenous Australians. Many (though not all) settlers
regarded indigenous people as inferior and not fully human.
By the late 19th century people of European descent vastly outnumbered
Indigenous Australians. The number of Indigenous Australians had fallen
drastically since the beginning of the century. From the end of the 19th
century until the 1960s half caste children were taken away from their parents
and in 1918 a law forbade a man of European descent to live with an
Indigenous woman.
Furthermore from the 1850s Chinese people came to work in Australia. In the
late 19th century all the Australian colonies restricted their immigration.
Meanwhile, in the late 19th century Polynesians came to work in the sugar
fields in the North. In 1901 an Immigrant Restriction Act was passed to stop
Asian immigrants.
The 1851 Gold Rush

In 1851 there was a gold rush in Victoria. The result was a huge influx of new
settlers into Australia. From 430,000 in 1851 the population of Australia rose
to 1.2 million in 1861. In 1861 Melbourne was the largest city with a population
of about 125,000. Sydney had about 100,000 people.
The Eureka Rebellion
Meanwhile the 1854 Eureka Rebellion occurred. The government introduced
licences for gold miners. This was much resented especially when the price
was raised and the police carried out 'hunts' to find licence dodgers. The
miners claimed the authorities were corrupt and unfair. Resentment grew and
on 17 October 1854 the Eureka Hotel was burned. Then on 29 November
1854 miners held a meeting under a new flag, the 'Eureka Flag'. They were
led by an Irishman named Peter Lalor (1827-1889). The men swore an oath to
defend their rights and liberties. They demanded not just an end to the
licences but also political reform. On 2 December 1854 they erected a
stockade at Eureka Lead.
However during the early morning of 3 December 1854 soldiers and police
attacked the stockade. The exact number of people killed is not known but it
was about 30. Following the 'battle' 120 men were captured and 13 were sent
to trial but all were acquitted. Despite the collapse of the rebellion all the
demands of the rebels were met. Licences were abolished. The Eureka
Rebellion entered Australian folklore as a fight for liberty. In 1998 a Eureka
Stockade Centre opened to commemorate the event.
Burke and Wills
In August 1860 18 men led by Robert Burke (1821-1861) and William Wills
(1834-1861) set out on an attempt to cross Australia from north to South. They
had 23 horses and 25 camels with them. When they reached Menindee in
October 1860 Burke split the expedition. An advance party would go to
Cooper's Creek. The rest of the expedition would follow.
Burke reached Cooper's Creek on 11 November 1860. However he decided to
continue without waiting for the rest of the expedition to arrive with the rest of
the supplies. He took 3 men with him, William Wills, Charles Gray and John
King. They had 1 horse and 6 camels. A man named William Brahe was left in
charge of the supplies at Cooper's Creek.
On 9 February 1861 Burke, Wills, Gray and King reached a salty creek and
realised they were near the sea. However they were unable to reach the sea.

Instead they turned back. They were forced to eat the horse and some of the
camels. Charles Gray died on 17 April.
Meanwhile William Brahe waited at Coopers Creek until 21 April. He then
decided to leave, only hours before Burke, Wills and King returned. Burke and
Wills both died of starvation. Only King survived as he was rescued by
Indigenous Australians.
Australia in the Late 19th Century
In the late 19th century Northern Australia began to grow. Darwin was founded
in 1869. In 1872 an overland telegraph was made from Darwin to Adelaide.
Cattle were very important to the northern economy. Because of the hot
climate there were also sugar plantations.
In 1901 the population of Australia was 3,370,000. The largest city was
Melbourne with a population of about 420,000. Second was Sydney with
about 360,000. Adelaide had about 115,000 and Brisbane 86,000. Hobart was
much smaller with just 34,000 people.
Meanwhile Australia had gained its first universities. Sydney University was
founded in 1850. It was followed by Melbourne University in 1853 and
Adelaide University in 1874.
There was also a railway boom in Australia in the late 19th century. Although
the first railways in Australia were built in the early 1850s there was still only
about 1,600 miles of railway in 1875. By 1891 there was over 10,000 miles of
railway.
Communications also improved with the invention of the telephone. The first
telephone call in Australia was made in Melbourne in 1878. Telephone
exchanges opened in Melbourne and Brisbane (1880), Sydney (1881),
Adelaide, Hobart and Launceston (1883) and Perth (1887).
However in the 1890s Australia suffered a recession, which was compounded
by drought in the late 1890s. Not surprisingly immigration fell dramatically
during the decade.
On the other hand gold was found in Western Australia in 1882. Another find
in 1892 led to a gold rush. However this time the gold was exploited by large
companies rather than by lone prospectors. The population of Western
Australia boomed as a result of the gold rush.

Australia in the Early 20th Century


By 1901 the population of Australia was over 3.7 million and it was growing
rapidly. The population of New South Wales was about 1.4 million.
At the end of the 19th century the different states agreed to form a federation.
So the Commonwealth of Australia was formed on 1 January 1901. After 1913
a new capital city was built at Canberra. Parliament House in Canberra
opened in 1927.
After 1900 Australia recovered, to some extent, from the recession of the
1890s but then came World War I. Then in 1907 a court case ended in the
Harvester Judgement which said that an unskilled workman should earn at
least 7 shillings for an 8 hour day. (In other words just enough for a decent
standard of living). This became the basis of Australia's basic wage.
However in 1900 bubonic plague struck a number of Australian cities. In
Sydney alone 103 people died. Sydney also suffered an outbreak of smallpox
in 1913 but fortunately only 4 people died.
Australia in the First World War
War was declared in August 1914. The first Australian soldiers left by ship in
November 1914. They were directed to Egypt. Turkey was Germany's ally and
the British government had a plan to seize the Dardanelles (the narrow straits
leading to the Black Sea). That would enable the British and French to open a
sea route to their ally Russia. It would also knock Turkey out of the war. First
they needed to capture Gallipoli Peninsula because Turkish guns there
controlled the straits.
In April 1915 the ANZACS (Australian and New Zealand Army Corps) were
sent to Gallipoli. However they were unable to dislodge the Turks. The Anzacs
were withdrawn in December 1915 having suffered nearly 8,000 casualties.
The Anzacs were then sent to the Western Front. Some 60,000 Australian
men died in the First World War.
Australia Between the Wars
In the 1920s immigration from Britain continued and Australia continued to
grow. Sydney became the first Australian city to have a population of 1 million
in 1922. Melbourne followed it in 1928. Sydney Harbour Bridge opened in
1932.

At the end of the 1920s there was industrial unrest in Australia. The waterside
workers went on strike in 1928-29. They were followed by the timber workers
in 1929 and miners in 1929-1930.
The first commercial flight in Australia was in 1921 between Geraldton and
Derby in Western Australia. In 1923 radio broadcasting began in Australia. In
1928 a Queenslander named Bert Hinkler (1892-1933) made the first solo
flight from Britain to Australia. The same year, 1928, the flying doctor service
began.
However in 1929 the depression hit Australia. The economy slumped and
unemployment rose sharply. By 1932 unemployment in Australia was 29%.
However after that year things got better and by the late 1930s unemployment
had fallen to about 10%.
Australia in the Second World War
During the Second World War Australia once again joined Britain in fighting
Germany. In 1940 Anzacs were sent to North Africa where they played a vital
role. However when Japan entered the war in December 1942 Australia
herself was in danger. When Singapore fell in February 1942 16,000
Australians were captured. Then in February 1942 the Japanese began air
raids on Darwin. These continued until November 1943. On May 31 1942 3
Japanese midget submarines entered Sydney Harbour. One of them
managed to sink a store ship, HMAS Kuttabul with the loss of 21 lives.
Meanwhile in September 1942 Australians fought in New Guinea and pushed
back the Japanese army. For the rest of World War II Australians fought under
the command of Douglas Macarthur. Some 37,000 Australians died in the
Second World War.
Australia in the Late 20th Century
After 1945 the Australian economy boomed. In the 1950s and 1960s there
was full employment and affluence. Meanwhile The Australian National
University was founded in 1946.
The School of the Air began in the Alice Springs area in 1951 and television
began in Australia in 1956. Sydney Opera House, a symbol of modern
Australia, opened in 1973.
In the late 1940s 'displaced people' left homeless after the war in Europe were
welcome in Australia. However Asians were not. Those Asians who had fled to

Australia during the war were deported. Arthur Calwell, Minister for
Immigration said: 'Two Wongs do not make a white'. However in the 1960s
immigration policy changed and many Asian immigrants came in the 1970s
and 1980s. There were also many immigrants from Southern and Eastern
Europe.
There were many immigrants from Britain after 1945. Nevertheless links with
Britain weakened. In 1949 the National Citizenship Act made Australians no
longer citizens of the UK and colonies but citizens of Australia. Finally in 1982
all appeals to the British courts were ended. The High Court Of Australia was
made the highest court of appeal.
Meanwhile in 1957 a trade treaty was made with Japan and links with Asia
became more important.
Treatment of Indigenous Australians improved. From 1959 Indigenous
Australians were allowed welfare benefits and after 1962 they were allowed to
vote. In 1971 Indigenous Australians were included in the census for the first
time.
The Snowy Mountains Scheme
From 1949 to 1974 a great civil engineering scheme was built the Snowy
Mountains Hydro-electric Scheme. The plan was to collect the water from
melting snow in the Australian Alps and divert it through tunnels to drive
hydro-electric power stations. The water would then flow into rivers for
irrigation. Over 25 years 16 dams were built, 12 tunnels and 7 power stations.
Workers from more than 30 nations toiled on the scheme.
On November 11 1975 the governor-general dismissed the Australian
government, which caused much controversy.
After 1975 the period of growth and prosperity in Australia came to an end.
For one thing inflation rose. Furthermore in the late 1970s unemployment
began to rise. By 1983 it had reached 10%. It fell to about 6% by 1988 but
then began to rise again.
In 1977 following a referendum Advance Australia Fair became the national
anthem.
The Mabo Judgement

A turning point in Australian history came in 1992 with the Mabo Judgement.
Indigenous Australians claimed that the island of Mer belonged to them and
not to the crown. A court finally overturned the doctrine of 'terra nullius', the
idea that Australia did not belong to anybody when the Europeans arrived. In
1993 the government passed the Native Title Bill to clarify rights to ownership
of land. However in 1993 came the Wik judgement, which said that even in
the Queensland government leased land to pastoralists the Indigenous
Australians still had some right to use the land as long as they did not interfere
with the pastoralists activities. In 1998 the government was forced to amend
the 1993 Native Title Act. As a symbol of reconciliation between the different
peoples of Australia over 250,000 people walked across Sydney Harbour
Bridge on 28 May 2000.
Australia in the 21st Century
Today the population of Australia is 22 million. In 2006 it was estimated that
the indigenous population was about 500,000 - about the same as it was
when Europeans first arrived in Australia at the end of the 18th century.
Unemployment was high in the 1990s but at the beginning of the 21st century
the situation improved. Unemployment in Australia stood at 5.2% in March
2012. Today Australia is a prosperous country.
In 2008 Quentin Bryce became the first woman Governor-General of
Australia. In 2010 Julia Gillard became the first woman Prime Minister of
Australia.

Culture

Since 1788, the basis of Australian culture has been strongly influenced by Anglo-Celtic Western
culture.[280][281] Distinctive cultural features have also arisen from Australia's natural environment and
Indigenous cultures.[282][283] Since the mid-20th century, American popular culture has strongly
influenced Australia, particularly through television and cinema.[284] Other cultural influences come
from neighbouring Asian countries, and through large-scale immigration from non-English-speaking
nations.[284][285]

art

The rock art of Australia's Indigenous peoples is the oldest and richest in the world, dating as far
back as 60,000 years and spread across hundreds of thousands of sites. [286] Traditional designs,
patterns and stories infuse contemporary Indigenous Australian art, "the last great art movement of
the 20th century";[287] its exponents include Emily Kame Kngwarreye.[288] During the first century of
European settlement, colonial artists, trained in Europe, showed a fascination with the unfamiliar
land.[289] The naturalistic, sun-filled works of Arthur Streeton,Tom Roberts and others associated with
the 19th-century Heidelberg Schoolthe first "distinctively Australian" movement in Western art
gave expression to a burgeoning Australian nationalism in the lead-up to Federation. [289] While the
school remained influential into the new century, modernists such asMargaret Preston, and,
later, Sidney Nolan and Arthur Boyd, explored new artistic trends.[289] The landscape remained a
central subject matter for Fred Williams, Brett Whiteleyand other post-World War II artists whose
works, eclectic in style yet uniquely Australian, moved between the figurative and the abstract.[289]
[290]
The National Gallery of Australiaand state galleries maintain collections of Australian and
international art.[291] Australia has one of the world's highest attendances of art galleries and
museums per head of population.[292]

Sport and recreation

About 24% of Australians over the age of 15 regularly participate in organised sporting activities.
[217]

At an international level, Australia has excelled at cricket, field hockey, netball, rugby

league and rugby union.[326] The majority of Australians live within the coastal zone, making the beach
a popular recreation spot and an integral part of the nation's identity.[327] Australia is a powerhouse in
water-based sports, such as swimming and surfing. [328] The surf lifesaving movement originated in
Australia, and the volunteer lifesaver is one of the country's icons.[329] Nationally, other popular sports
include Australian rules football, horse racing, squash, surfing, soccer, and motor racing. The
annual Melbourne Cup horse race and the Sydney to Hobart yacht race attract intense interest.[330]
Australia is one of five nations to have participated in every Summer Olympics of the modern era,
[331]

and has hosted the Games twice:1956 in Melbourne and 2000 in Sydney.[332] Australia has also

participated in every Commonwealth Games,[333] hosting the event in 1938,1962, 1982, 2006 and will
host the 2018 Commonwealth Games.[334] Australia made its inaugural appearance at the Pacific
Games in2015. As well as being a regular FIFA World Cup participant, Australia has won the OFC
Nations Cup four times and the AFC Asian Cuponce the only country to have won championships
in two different FIFA confederations.[335] Other major international events held in Australia include
the Australian Open tennis grand slam tournament, international cricket matches, and the Australian
Formula One Grand Prix. Australia hosted the 2003 Rugby World Cup and the annual AustraliaNew
Zealand Bledisloe Cup is keenly watched.[citation needed]The highest-rating television programs include
sports telecasts such as the Summer Olympics, FIFA World Cup, The Ashes, Rugby League State of
Origin, and the grand finalsof the National Rugby League and Australian Football League.[336] Skiing
in Australia began in the 1860s and snow sports take place in the Australian Alps and parts
ofTasmania.

Current status of country

Australia is a developed country and one of the wealthiest in the world, with the world's 12th-largest
economy. In 2014 Australia had the world's fifth-highest per capita income.[20] Australia's military
expenditure is the world's 13th-largest. With the second-highest human development index globally,
Australia ranks highly in many international comparisons of national performance, such as quality of
life, health, education, economic freedom, and the protection of civil liberties and political rights.
[21]
Australia is a member of the United Nations, G20, Commonwealth of
Nations, ANZUS, Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), World Trade
Organization, Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation, and the Pacific Islands Forum.

Australias economic freedom score is 81.4, making its economy the 4th freest in the 2015 Index. Its
overall score is 0.6 point lower than last year, with gains in monetary freedom and labor freedom
outweighed by declines in investment freedom, freedom from corruption, and the control of government
spending. Australia is ranked 4th out of 42 countries in the AsiaPacific region.

Banking regulations are sensible, and lending practices have been relatively
prudent. Monetary stability is well maintained, with inflationary pressures under
control. A well-functioning independent judiciary ensures strong protection of
property rights, and corruption has been minimal.
BACKGROUND

Since the early 1980s, successive governments have deregulated financial and labor markets and
reduced trade barriers. In September 2013, Liberal Party leader Tony Abbott was elected prime minister
following his coalitions victory in national elections. Australia is one of the AsiaPacifics wealthiest
nations and has enjoyed more than two decades of economic expansion. Australia emerged from the
global recession relatively unscathed, but stimulus spending by the previous Labor government generated
a fiscal deficit. Australia is internationally competitive in services, technologies, and high-value-added
manufactured goods. Mining and agriculture are important sources of exports.

RULE OF LAWVIEW METHODOLOGY

Property Rights90.0Create a Graph using this measurement


Freedom From Corruption81.0Create a Graph using this measurement
Australia has a stable political environment with well-established and transparent political processes, a
strong legal system, and a professional bureaucracy. Anti-corruption measures are generally effective in
discouraging bribery of public officials. Australias judicial system operates independently and impartially.
Property rights are secure, and enforcement of contracts is reliable. Expropriation is highly unusual.
LIMITED GOVERNMENTVIEW METHODOLOGY

Government Spending61.8Create a Graph using this measurement


Fiscal Freedom63.7Create a Graph using this measurement
The top individual income tax rate is 45 percent, and the top corporate tax rate is 30 percent. Other taxes
include a value-added tax and a capital gains tax. Total tax revenues equal about 27 percent of the
domestic economy. A controversial carbon tax has been repealed. Government expenditures equal 35.7
percent of the economy, and public debt is equivalent to less than 30 percent of GDP.
REGULATORY EFFICIENCYVIEW METHODOLOGY

Business Freedom94.1Create a Graph using this measurement


Labor Freedom81.6Create a Graph using this measurement
Monetary Freedom85.3Create a Graph using this measurement
Start-up companies enjoy great flexibility under licensing and other regulatory frameworks. It takes only
one procedure to start a business, and no minimum capital is required. Flexible labor regulations facilitate
a dynamic labor market, increasing overall productivity. In 2014, the government lifted price controls on
electricity to encourage market-based production of power.
OPEN MARKETSVIEW METHODOLOGY

Trade Freedom86.4Create a Graph using this measurement


Investment Freedom80.0Create a Graph using this measurement
Financial Freedom90.0Create a Graph using this measurement

Australia has a 1.8 percent average tariff rate, and non-tariff barriers are low. Large-scale foreign
investments are subject to review. In 2013, the government rejected a takeover of Australias GrainCorp
by the U.S. firm Archer Daniels Midland. The well-developed financial sector offers a wide range of
financing instruments. The banking system has remained stable, and all banks are privately owned.

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