3302.0 - Deaths, Australia, 2008 Quality Declaration 
ARCHIVED ISSUE Released at 11:30 AM (CANBERRA TIME) 25/11/2009   
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Contents >> Summary of Findings >> INTERNATIONAL COMPARISON

INTERNATIONAL COMPARISON

Life expectancy

Australians have a life expectancy at birth which compares well with that experienced in other developed nations. According to the United Nations in World Population Prospects: The 2008 Revision (2009), global life expectancy at birth for 2005-2010 (medium variant) is estimated to be 65.4 years for males and 69.8 years for females. ABS life tables for 2006-2008 indicate that life expectancy at birth for Australian males (79.2 years) and females (83.7 years) continue to be among the highest in the world.

Life expectancy at birth varies widely between regions of the world. According to United Nations estimates for 2005-2010, Northern America has the highest combined life expectancy at birth at 79.3 years followed by Oceania (76.4 years) and Europe (75.1 years). Africa (54.1 years) has the lowest combined life expectancy at birth followed by Asia (68.9 years), then Latin America and the Caribbean (73.4 years).

Also according to United Nations estimates for 2005-2010, life expectancy at birth of Australian males (79.1 years) is exceeded only by Iceland, Hong Kong (SAR of China) and Switzerland. Life expectancy at birth of Australian females (83.8) is exceeded by Japan, Hong Kong (SAR of China), France, Switzerland, and Spain.

Combined Australian male and female life expectancy at birth for 2005-2010 was 81.5 years. This was higher than the level for Canada (80.7 years), New Zealand (80.2 years), the United Kingdom (79.4 years) and the United States of America (79.2 years).

2.12 LIFE EXPECTANCY AT BIRTH, Selected countries
Graph: 2.12 LIFE EXPECTANCY AT BIRTH, Selected countries



Infant mortality rate

The United Nations in World Population Prospects: The 2008 Revision (2009) estimates the global infant mortality rate for 2005-2010 to be 47.3 infant deaths per 1,000 live births. The United Nations estimate of Australia's IMR (4.5 infant deaths per 1,000 live births) is among the lowest in the world, lower than that of New Zealand (4.6), Canada and the United Kingdom (both 4.8), and the United States of America (5.9). Iceland (2.9) has the lowest IMR, followed by Singapore (3.0) and Sweden (3.1).

On a regional basis, Northern America has the lowest IMR, with 5.8 infant deaths per 1,000 live births, followed by Europe (7.2). The world's regions recording the highest IMRs are Africa (82.6), followed by Asia (41.5), Oceania (22.8), which includes Australia, and then Latin America and the Caribbean (21.8).







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