The effects of the CDEP scheme on the economic status of Indigenous Australians: some analyses using the 1996 Census

The effects of the CDEP scheme on the economic status of Indigenous Australians: some analyses using the 1996 Census Report

CAEPR Discussion Paper

  • Author(s): Altman, J, Gray, M
  • Published: 2000
  • Publisher: Centre for Aboriginal Economic Policy Research, ANU College of Arts & Social Sciences, Australian National University

Abstract: The Community Development Employment Projects (CDEP) scheme is currently the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Commission's (ATSIC's) most significant program. Since its establishment in 1977, this Indigenous-specific program has been variously described as a labour market program, an alternative income support scheme and a community development initiative. A major objective of the scheme is to improve the employment and income status of Indigenous people. This paper presents the first analysis using data from the 1996 Census of the effects of CDEP employment on the economic status of Indigenous individuals. The 1996 Census is the first census that provides information about CDEP employees. Information is restricted to areas in which the Special Indigenous Personal Forms (SIPF) were utilised, but this allows the effects of CDEP employment on income to be better isolated, at least in these areas. Some comparisons of the labour market outcomes of Indigenous people in CDEP communities to those in non-CDEP communities are also presented.

Notes: ISSN: 1036 1774 ISBN: 0 7315 2630 9

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Suggested Citation
Altman, J, Gray, M, 2000, The effects of the CDEP scheme on the economic status of Indigenous Australians: some analyses using the 1996 Census, Report, viewed 09 October 2024, https://www.nintione.com.au/?p=5445.

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