Personal Income of Migrants, Australia methodology

Latest release
Reference period
2016-17 financial year

Explanatory notes

Introduction

1 The statistics in this publication relate to persons 15 years and over who have migrated to Australia under a permanent or provisional visa with an arrival date between 1 January 2000 and 30 June 2019. This release contains new estimates on the sources of personal income that migrants received in the 2016-17 financial year. The tables provide a breakdown of total personal income by the following sources - Employee income, Own unincorporated business income, Investment income, Other income (excludes Government pensions and allowances) and Total income (excludes Government pensions and allowances).

2 The statistics in this publication were compiled from the 2016-17 Personal Income Tax and Migrants Integrated Dataset (PITMID) produced by the Personal Income Tax and Migrants Integrated Dataset Project. The project used a deterministic linking strategy to combine the Australian Tax Office (ATO) Personal Income Tax 100% data file for the 2016-17 financial year with an extract of permanent migrant settlement records from the Department of Home Affairs. Estimates for the previous two financial years (2014-15 and 2015-16) have been included in additional Excel spreadsheets available via the Data downloads section. Estimates for the previous financial years 2009-10 through to 2013-14 have been released in prior issues of this publication.

3 For further information on the project see Research Paper: Feasibility Study of Linking Migrant Settlement Records to Personal Income Tax Data, Aug 2014 (cat. no. 1351.0.55.051), Research Paper: Personal Income Tax and Migrants Integrated Dataset (PITMID) 2011-12 Quality Assessment, October 2016 (cat. no. 1351.0.55.060) and the project entry in Data Integration Register, Australia (cat. no. 1900.0)

Data sources

Permanent Migrant Data

4 The Permanent Migrant Data (PMD), formerly known as the Settlement Database (SDB), is an extract of administrative data compiled by the Australian Government from various departmental systems and a number of external sources, including the Department of Home Affairs and Department of Human Services (Medicare Australia). The Department of Home Affairs is the custodian of the PMD data. The PMD is a consolidated database of information on persons who have been granted a permanent or provisional/temporary visa. The PMD generally excludes temporary visa holders.

5 This project linked migrants with an arrival date between 1 January 2000 and 30 June 2019 for the 2014-15, 2015-16 and 2016-17 financial years of PIT data. There were 3.4 million permanent migrants included in this iteration of the PITMID project (i.e. for the 2014-15, 2015-16 and 2016-17 financial years) compared with 2.8 million permanent migrants included in the previous 2013-14 PITMID project.

Personal Income Tax data

6 The Personal Income Tax (PIT) data is sourced from the Australian Taxation Office (ATO).

7 These results are based, in part on tax data supplied by the ATO to the ABS under the Taxation Administration Act 1953, which requires that such data is only used for the purpose of administering the Census and Statistics Act 1905. Any discussion of data limitations or weaknesses is in the context of using the data for statistical purposes, and is not related to the ability of the data to support the ATO's core operational requirements.

8 Legislative requirements to ensure privacy and secrecy of this data have been adhered to. In accordance with the Census and Statistics Act 1905, the results have been confidentialised to ensure that they are not likely to enable identification of a particular person or organisation.

9 The data has been collected in compliance with Australian taxation laws. The unit record data was provided to the ABS for a variety of statistical purposes and so was not tailored specifically to this project. The unit record PIT dataset contains a range of key data items such as income and tax deductions. It also contains auxiliary socio-demographic data items such as age, sex and birth year. Information on the statistics contained in the dataset is generally available through the ATO website or via a combination of data dictionary and tax return form information.

10 Data provided to the ABS by the ATO are from taxation returns processed up to 16 months after the end of the financial year (i.e. returns processed up to 31 October 2018 for the financial year ending 30 June 2017). Due to the identifying nature of the data it contains, access to all ATO datasets is strictly regulated by the ATO. Both the ATO and the ABS handle personal information contained in the data in accordance with the Australian Privacy Principles contained in the Privacy Act 1988.

11 According to taxation laws, individuals whose income is below a certain threshold are not required to submit tax returns. However, amendments to the taxation laws can significantly alter the information that is required to be reported in the personal income tax returns and statistics derived from the PIT dataset will be influenced by tax regulation changes. Since the 2012-13 financial year, the tax-free threshold has been $18,200, after rising from $6,000 in 2011-12. This may lead to a slight over-inflation of incomes as those with incomes below this value are not included.

Scope and coverage

12 The main functions and responsibilities of the ATO are to administer taxation legislation and to collect a wide variety of taxes. The ATO therefore collects data from its reporting population as part of its processes to calculate income tax liability for those persons who are required to lodge an income tax return.

13 The ATO database covers all individuals who submit an individual income tax return and includes persons with income from one or more of a range of sources, such as employee income, own unincorporated businesses, superannuation and annuities, investments and some Government pensions, benefits or allowances.

14 The data items requested from the ATO and presented in this release are those needed to create the ABS Income Standards.

15 For the purposes of providing statistical measures for the entire population, the ATO database has some limits to its coverage. Persons who receive an income below certain levels are not necessarily required to lodge a tax return. This can include persons who derive their income from government pensions and allowances. Consequently, the coverage of low income earners, including people receiving government pensions and allowances, is incomplete in ATO records. In addition, some Commonwealth of Australia Government pension, benefit and allowance payments are exempt from income tax and are therefore not required to be included in tax returns. As such, the ATO data should be regarded as an indicative though not complete picture of all income earners in Australia.

16 Due to the tax exempt status of many Government pensions and allowances, information on these income sources are under-reported on the PIT dataset. For this reason, Government pensions and allowances are not included in the calculation of Total income in this publication. Methods for including more complete Government pensions and allowances information sourced from different Government datasets are being considered for future iterations of this project.

17 All data presented are gross income before deductions - and before tax and the Medicare levy are applied. Data presented are for migrant taxpayers aged 15 years and over at the start of the reference period.

18 The 2016-17 PITMID is restricted to people on the PMD who linked to a PIT record. The PMD records on the extract were limited to those with a date of arrival between 1 January 2000 and 30 June 2019 (inclusive) and the following exclusions also apply;

  • Non-visa settlers (e.g. some New Zealand citizens who have migrated to Australia)
  • Deceased persons
  • Migrants on Temporary visas, such as Students and Temporary work (Skilled) visas (these visa holders are not on the PMD).
     

19 The PMD date of arrival on which the scope is based reflects an individual's latest arrival pertaining to their latest permanent visa. For visas that were granted onshore (i.e. in Australia), the Arrival Date refers to the latest date of arrival prior to the grant of that visa. For settlement visas that were granted offshore (i.e. outside of Australia), the Arrival Date refers to the first date of arrival after the grant of that visa.

20 Of the 3,433,844 PMD records, 2,085,856 records (61%) were linked to a PIT record. After obtaining the PIT records for the 2016-17 dataset, there were 1,948,695 records on the 2016-17 PITMID.

21 The main reasons for not linking a PMD record to a PIT record are:

  • There is no corresponding PIT record; or
  • The data on either the PMD record or the corresponding PIT record is of insufficient quality to link.
     

22 Analysis of the PMD and the PIT datasets prior to linking indicated that they were both of a sufficiently high quality to link if a corresponding PIT record existed. However, there are a number of valid reasons why a PMD record would not have a corresponding PIT record. There are many legitimate reasons for there not being a corresponding PIT record as not every person would be required to submit a tax return. These include but are not restricted to a person:

  • not having submitted a tax return by the time of extraction of information;
  • not being in paid employment or earning an income in the reference period;
  • living in Australia on a visa stream that places restrictions on employment;
  • not being in Australia during the reference period;
  • having an income that is within the tax free threshold; and
  • not having any tax withheld.
     

23 As such, it was not expected that the linkage rate for this project would reach 100% for the entire population on the PMD. There has been no weighting or adjustment applied to the dataset but due to the high match rate, bias is anticipated to be small. For more information, see the "Reliability of estimates" section below.

Changes this issue

24 The table below shows the changes to calculations of income sources for PITMID since 2010-11. Note that there have been no new changes to calculations of income sources from 2012-13 to 2016-17.

Table 1 - Changes to calculations of income sources since 2010-11

Reference periodChanges to Employee incomeChanges to Own unincorporated business incomeChanges to Investment incomeChanges to Other incomeChanges to Foreign income
2010-11   Removed - Foreign investment fund and/or foreign life assurance policy income 
2011-12Added - Exempt foreign employment income Added - Franked distribution from trusts - Non-primary distribution Added - Foreign source income - Net foreign employment income payment summary; - Exempt foreign employment income;
2012-13    Added - Net foreign employment income - Payment summary

 

Income sources

Employee income

25 Employee income includes the main forms of payments made to employees for their work or services. Employee income, as reported on the income tax return, includes:

  • Q1-CDEFG Total income from wage and salary (before tax and application of Medicare levy) as shown on the 'PAYG payment summary - individual non-business';
  • Q2-K Allowances, earnings, tips, director's fees, etc;
  • Q3-H Employer lump sum payments - 5% of amount B;
  • Q3-R Employer lump sum payments - amount A;
  • Q4-I Employment termination payments;
  • Q9-O Attributed personal services income;
  • Q12-B Employee share schemes;
  • Q20-N Exempt foreign employment income;
  • Q20-T Other net foreign employment income;
  • IT1-W Total reportable fringe benefits; and
  • IT2-T Reportable employer superannuation contributions.
     

26 Employee income includes employer social contributions. However, income for many components of social contributions are not reported on the PIT dataset and hence are not included in the calculation of employee income for this publication.

27 Reportable employer superannuation contributions include contributions for both employees and own unincorporated business owners. However, the proportion of people reporting as own unincorporated business owners is considered to be sufficiently small for the gross amount to be included as employee income.

28 Other net foreign employment income was separately identified by the ATO on the 2009-10 tax form for individuals (Item Q20-T) for the first time. Items Q20-N, Q20-T and Q20-U on the tax return are included as foreign employment income. Amounts in T are for foreign employment income where an Individual PAYG form has not been issued by the foreign employer.

29 Amounts in Q20-N are for foreign employment income where tax exemptions apply (e.g. employment income for some defence and police work). Where the foreign employment income is 100% tax exempt, it will not appear on the tax return or the supplementary form. Where the foreign employment income is not 100% tax exempt, the amounts reported in Q20-N are taxable amounts, that is gross amounts less deductions.

Own unincorporated business income

30 Own unincorporated business income includes the following data items on the individual income tax return:

  • Q13-N,L Distributions from partnerships and trusts for primary production activities;
  • Q13-O Distributions from partnerships for non-primary production activities;
  • Q14-A Net personal services income; and
  • Q15-B,C Net income (or loss) from business.
     

31 "Net personal services income" does not include income a person received as an employee, making it different from "Attributed personal services income".

Investment income

32 Investment income includes the following data items on the individual income tax returns:

  • Q10-L Gross interest;
  • Q11-S Dividends unfranked amount;
  • Q11-T Dividends franked amount;
  • Q11-U Dividends franking credit;
  • Q13-C Franked distribution from trusts - Non-primary production;
  • Q13-U Distribution from trusts less net capital gains and foreign income - non-primary production;
  • Q20-F Australian franking credits from a New Zealand company;
  • Q20-R Net foreign rent; and
  • Q21-P (less Q21-F,Q,U) Net rent.
     

Superannuation and annuity income (included in other income)

33 Superannuation and annuity income includes the following data items on the individual income tax returns:

  • Q7-JN Australian annuities and superannuation income streams;
  • Q7-YZ Australian annuities and superannuation income streams - lump sum in arrears;
  • Q8-QP Australian superannuation lump sum payments; and
  • Q22-W Bonuses from life insurance companies and friendly societies.
     

34 A change to legislation relating to superannuation, taking effect from 1 July 2007, means that people aged 60 years and over who receive superannuation income in the form of a lump sum or income stream (such as a pension) from a taxed source, will receive that income tax free. Therefore, if a person has no other income, or their total income is below the tax-free threshold, or any tax payable is mitigated by a tax offset (such as Senior Australian Tax Offset), then this person will not be required to lodge a tax return. Therefore, there is a known undercount for this data item.

35 Methods for including more complete Superannuation and annuities income from additional datasets are being considered for future iterations of this project.

36 Due to the low response rates to this income source, Superannuation and annuities income was included in Other income.

Other income (excluding Government pensions and allowances)

37 Other income (excluding Government pensions and allowances) includes the following data items on the individual income tax returns:

  • Q19-B Foreign entities - Transferor or trust income;
  • Q19-K Foreign entities - Controlled foreign company income;
  • Q20-LD Foreign source income - Net foreign pension or annuity;
  • Q20-M Foreign source income - Other net foreign source income;
  • Q20-U Net foreign employment income - Payment summary; and
  • Q24-VY Other income.
     

38 Due to the tax exempt status of many Government pensions and allowances, information on these income sources are under-reported on the PIT dataset. For this reason, Government pensions and allowances are not included in the calculation of Total income in this publication. Methods for including more complete Government pensions and allowances information sourced from different Government datasets are being considered for future iterations of this project.

Total income (excluding Government pensions and allowances)

39 Total income (excluding Government pensions and allowances) is calculated by summing the values of employee income, own unincorporated business income, investment income, superannuation and annuities, and other income (excluding Government pensions and allowances).

Non-standard income source - income from foreign sources

40 Given the migrant focus of this publication, a non-standard income source for income from foreign sources was calculated.

41 Income from foreign sources include the following data items on the individual income taxation return:

  • Q19-B Foreign entities - Transferor or trust income;
  • Q19-K Foreign entities - Controlled foreign company income;
  • Q20-U Foreign source income - Net foreign employment income payment summary;
  • Q20 -F Foreign source income Australian franking credits from a New Zealand (NZ) company
  • Q20-N Exempt foreign employment income;
  • Q20-T Other net foreign employment source income;
  • Q20-R Net foreign rent;
  • Q20-LD Foreign source income - Net foreign pension/annuity income; and
  • Q20-M Foreign source income - Other net foreign source income.
  • Q20-U Net foreign employment income - Payment summary
     

Counts of individuals

42 Individuals may receive income from a number of sources. Net income from a specific source may be positive or negative. For example, an individual may have positive net income from employee income but negative net income from investment. The number of individuals for each income source includes all persons with either positive or negative net income from that source.

43 Readers should note that individuals can receive income from more than one source. The total number of persons receiving total income cannot be calculated as the sum of the individual income source components. For example, an individual could derive income from employee income, investment and their own unincorporated business and therefore contribute to the person count in all three income categories. However, they would only be counted once in Total income.

Data considerations

44 There are a few data consideration that users should be aware of when interpreting or analysing the statistics.

ATO definition of Australian resident for taxation purposes

45 Generally, the ATO considers someone to be an Australian resident for tax purposes if they:

  • have either always lived in Australia or have come to Australia to live permanently;
  • have been in Australia for more than half of the financial year (unless their usual home is overseas and they don't intend to live in Australia);
  • have been in Australia continuously for six months or more and for most of that time have been in the one job and living in the same place; or
  • are an overseas student enrolled in a course of study for more than six months duration.
     

Changes in annual income

46 Percentage changes in the annual income received by migrant taxpayers for 2014-15 and 2015-16 are in 2016-17 dollars i.e. have been adjusted by the Consumer Price Index (CPI) to enable comparison 'in real terms'.

47 In order to represent values from previous years in the financial base year (eg 2016-17 dollars), income amounts were multiplied by the following respective values.

Table 2 - CPI multiply factor for the base financial year

Financial yearCPI increase
Base Year 2016-17 
2014-151.031126
2015-161.017082
Base Year 2015-16 
2014-151.013808
Base Year 2014-15 
2013-141.017139

Definition of 'job'

48 A job is determined by an Individual Pay-As-You-Go (PAYG) record linked to an ABN record. A person with more than one PAYG link to an ABN is considered as having more than one job in the financial year. A person with more than one job in the financial year can have held these jobs consecutively, concurrently or both. The presence of "Period start date" and "Period end date" on the 2016-17 PAYG dataset enables the identification of those records who held more than one job at the same point, i.e. multiple job holders.

49 Where there is a job splitting arrangement in place for two employees performing the one job, this would be counted as two jobs based on the Individual PAYG rather than one. Given this definition and the available tax data, there will be an over-count for the number of jobs.

Industry coding

50 The ABS uses an economic statistics model on the Australian Business Register (ABR) to describe the characteristics of a business and the structural relationship between related businesses. Within large and diverse business groups, the unit's model is used to define reporting units that can provide data to the ABS at suitable levels of detail.

51 In mid-2002, the ABS commenced sourcing its register information from the ABR and at that time changed its business register to a two population model. The two populations comprise what is called the Profiled Population and the Non-Profiled Population. The main distinction between businesses in the two populations relates to the complexity of the business structure and the degree of intervention required to reflect the business structure for statistical purposes.

Non-Profiled Population

52 The majority of businesses included on the ABR are in the Non-Profiled Population. Most of these businesses are understood to have simple structures. For these businesses, the ABS is able to use the Australian Business Number (ABN) as the basis for a statistical unit. One ABN equates to one statistical unit.

Profiled population

53 For a small number of businesses, the ABN unit is not suitable for ABS economic statistics purposes and the ABS maintains its own units structure through direct contact with businesses. These businesses constitute the Profiled Population. This population consists typically of large or complex groups of businesses. For more information on how the ABS codes these businesses, refer to the methodology page of publication Australian Industry, 2013-14 (cat. no. 8155.0).

Processing of tax returns

54 The data presented in this publication were compiled before the processing of all income tax returns for any given year may have been completed. Data provided to the ABS by the ATO are from returns processed up to 31 October, 16 months after the end of the financial year. Any returns lodged after this date are not included. Therefore for 2016-17 returns processed after 31 October 2018 are not included. This enables a consistent basis for comparison across financial years.

55 Because of the late lodgement of tax returns in any tax reference year, the data provided in this report under-estimates the total taxable income for any given financial year. It is estimated that up to 6% of tax returns for any reference year are lodged after the 16 month cut-off date after the financial year.

Changes in taxation policy

56 The ATO provides information annually in their Taxation Statistics publications on their website about changes that may affect taxation statistics. Information on changes to taxation policy and/or relating to personal income tax are in each edition of Taxation Statistics. The ABS strongly encourages users of the data to research policy changes that may impact in the comparability of the data year to year. For more information see the Taxation Statistics publications.

Confidentiality

57 In accordance with the Census and Statistics Act 1905, all published estimates are subjected to a confidentiality process before release. This process is undertaken to minimise the risk of identifying particular individuals, families, households or dwellings in aggregate statistics, through analysis of published data.

58 To minimise the risk of identifying individuals in aggregate statistics, a technique is used to randomly adjust cell values. This technique is called perturbation. Perturbation involves small random adjustment of the statistics and is considered the most satisfactory technique for avoiding the release of identifiable statistics while maximising the range of information that can be released. These adjustments have a negligible impact on the underlying pattern of the statistics. After perturbation, a given published cell value will be consistent across all tables. However, adding up cell values to derive a total will not necessarily give the same result as published totals.

59 The introduction of perturbation in publications ensures that these statistics are consistent with statistics released via services such as TableBuilder. Caution should be exercised by users when deducing that there are nil people in an area with certain types of income. In general, no reliance should be placed on table cells with small values.

Reliability of estimates

60 Error in estimates produced using the Personal Income Tax and Migrants Integrated Datasets may occur due to false links, missed links and the non-random distribution of unlinked records.

False links

61 Given the high quality of the variables used (encoded name and geocoded addresses) for the deterministic linking and the strict acceptance conditions used, the expected number of false links in PITMID is not expected to be significant. However, the number of false links in the dataset has not been calculated or estimated.

62 The integration process used to link the 2016-17, 2015-16 and 2014-15 datasets differs from those used to integrate previous PITMID datasets. Previous iterations have used Mesh block as the smallest geographic unit in linkage. This iteration of PITMID has utilised Address Register Identifier (ARIDs) which provides a greater degree of linkage precision.

Missed links

63 Due to the strict acceptance conditions imposed during the linkage process, it is possible that some legitimate records could have been missed. However, given the high quality of the linking variables used, it is likely that a high proportion of the unlinked records are simply non-tax lodgers and not missed links.

Unlinked records

64 Error introduced by under or over representation of characteristic based groups in unlinked records has not been mitigated by a calibration process. Due to the high quality of the linking variables, it is likely that a high proportion of the unlinked records are simply persons who did not lodge a taxation return.

Comparability with other data

65 Estimates from the 2016-17 PITMID will differ from the estimates produced from other ABS collections and estimates produced from the PMD for several reasons. The estimates are a result of integrating data from two administrative data sources. The linked records are uncalibrated as there were no known population totals to benchmark to, and the resulting dataset is unique from both the PIT data and the PMD. Due to the quality issues mentioned in the Reliability of Estimates section, estimates should generally be treated with caution.

66 Further information about the data and the linking methodology used for the 2011-12 PITMID are available in the Research Paper: Personal Income Tax and Migrants Integrated Dataset (PITMID) 2011-12 Quality Assessment, Oct 2016 (cat. no. 1351.0.55.060). Information on the data and linking methodology used to create the 2009-10 and 2010-11 PITMID can be found in the Research Paper: Feasibility Study of Linking Migrant Settlement Records to Personal Income Tax Data, Aug 2014 (cat. no. 1351.0.55.051). This research paper provides a summary of the Migrant PIT Feasibility Study.

Australian Census and Migrant Integrated Dataset (ACMID), 2016

67 The 2016 ACMID contains information such as Occupation of main job and Personal weekly income. However, this information is limited to persons aged 15 years and over present in Australia on Census night. The information on Occupation and income on the PITMID includes all persons who linked to a PIT record. However, the PITMID may only includes those who earned an income above the tax free threshold. Therefore, while similar statistics can be derived from both the ACMID and the PITMID, they are not directly comparable due to differing scope in population.

Other ABS publications utilising PIT data

68 Estimates from the PITMID are not comparable to the PIT data included in the regional statistics publications; Wage and Salary Earner Estimates for Small Areas (cat. no. 5673.0.55.003) and Estimates of Personal Income for Small Areas (cat. no. 6524.0.55.002). These publications include the PIT data for the whole population, not just migrants. Consequently, personal income data for permanent migrants cannot be identified in these publications' data.

69 Tables 10, 11 and 12 in this PITMID publication contain data for the Australian taxpayer population. This data is not directly comparable with data contained in the most recent Estimates of Personal Income for Small Areas publication. Data in the PITMID tables include only those people aged 15 years and over at the beginning of the reference period, whereas data in the Estimates of Personal Income for Small Areas publication include all taxpayers.

Acknowledgement

70 The ABS acknowledges the continuing support provided by the Australian Taxation Office (ATO) and the Department of Home Affairs for the Migrant PIT Data Integration Project. The provision of data as well as ongoing assistance provided by our stakeholders is essential to enable this important work to be undertaken. The enhancing of migrant related statistics through data linkage by the ABS would not be possible without their cooperation and support.

Further information

71 For further information about these and other statistics, please contact the National Information and Referral Service on 1300 135 070.

Glossary

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Quality declaration

Institutional environment

Relevance

Timeliness

Accuracy

Coherence

Interpretability

Accessibility

Abbreviations

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