

ADHB, in terms of total budget, is the largest district health board in
the country with annual revenue of approximately $1.8 billion dollars.
This funding is associated with the provision of local, regional and
national health services. Auckland City has approximately 10 per cent of the total population of
New Zealand.
Understanding the structure of the population, trends and
changes over time is an important starting point for this work.
The population in 2004 was estimated at 420,700 and is growing rapidly.
In 2011 it is estimated that there are
458, 336 people living in Auckland City. By 2051 that population is
expected to reach 675, 210.
What Is our population made up of?
|
Ethnic Groups (Total responses) |
|
|
Auckland City |
New Zealand |
|
European |
65.7% |
80.1% |
|
Maori |
8.4% |
14.7% |
|
Pacific Peoples |
13.7% |
6.5% |
|
Asian Peoples |
18.7% |
6.6% |
|
Other nations |
1.6% |
0.7% |
|
The most common languages spoken |
|
English |
320,295 |
|
Samoan |
14,226 |
|
Yue |
9,993 |
|
Maori |
8,799 |
|
Northern Chinese |
8,469 |
|
Tongan |
8,217 |
|
French |
8,178 |
|
Hindi |
7,941 |
The ethnic composition of the population is project to
change over time, with growth expected in the proportion of Asian
peoples in the population, and a reduction in the proportion of European
peoples.
|
By 2016 the ethnic composition of
Auckland City is project to be: |
|
European |
51% |
|
Asian |
34% |
|
Maori |
8% |
|
Pacific peoples |
13% |
Auckland DHB population age?
Seventy per cent of people in the
Auckland City area are working age adults (15-64 years). Maori and Pacific
peoples have a very young population and around one-third aged under 15
years, and fewer than 5 per cent aged 65 years and older.
Although Auckland City has an ageing population, the
growth over the next 10 years is likely to be in the 40-64 year
age group. During the period 2001-2016 it is likely that:
- The percentage of under 15 years olds will
decrease
- The percentage of 15-39 year olds will decrease
- The greatest percentage of the population will be
aged 40-65 years
- The percentage of those aged 65 years and over
will remain relatively constant
ADHB population deprivation?
The New Zealand deprivation index reflects aspects of
material and social deprivation. The index estimates an overall
score of deprivation for an area and shows the percentage of people in
Auckland City living in each deprivation index decile. The scale
ranges from 1 (least deprived ) to 10 (most deprived). Across New
Zealand ten per cent of people live in each decile.
In 2001 a high percentage of Maori and Pacific people
lived in the most deprived areas. Sixty-five percent of pacific
peoples and about fifty per cent of Maori live in deciles 8-10, compared
with thirty-four percent of Asian peoples and nineteen percent of
Europeans.


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