The fifth anniversary of the Northern Territory Emergency Response Intervention ticked over June 21. It was supposed to be “liberation” day for prescribed communities in the Northern Territory, by now supposedly “stabilised, normalised and exited”.
Instead it was another day of shame for the many Aboriginal people who are demeaned and humiliated by intervention measures and resent such “special” treatment.
On the eve of this anniversary, the Australian government strategically released its latest Closing the Gap in the Northern Territory Monitoring Report for the period July to December 2011. Instead of telling us about some appalling outcomes in this report, particularly in the area of escalating reported self harm and suicide since the intervention, the accompanying ministerial media release told us about more jobs and job opportunities for Aboriginal people in the Northern Territory (failing to tell us about thousands of job losses).
Not one mainstream media outlet focused on the anniversary. Instead, probably quite coincidentally, the Australian Bureau of Statistics issued first release data from the 2011 Census. This revealed an unexpected 20% increase in the indigenous population since 2006 interpreted by some as reflecting an “apology effect”, indigenous people are apparently now so relaxed and comfortable in multicultural Australia that they are more willing to identify.
Such an increase was not evident in the NT where the population grew by only 5.8%, an increase of just over 1% per annum that probably does not even capture natural increase.
I have been pointing out for some time now that the National Partnership Agreement to Close the Gap in the Northern Territory signed between the Australian and NT governments in July 2009 is just a wicked misnomer for the intervention. It is a policy framework whose regular six monthly monitoring reports make no attempt to statistically assess whether gaps between indigenous and non-indigenous Territorians, which the oft-repeated mantra “Closing the Gap” imply, have been closed.
I must say that I am somewhat sceptical about the notion of “closing gaps”, mainly because I see such terminology as privileging western norms, values and social indicators over what might actually matter to Aboriginal people. Such discourse reflects a particular form of cultural hegemony that is deeply concerning, feeding as it does non-indigenous notions of cultural superiority that are all too prevalent in Australian society today.
Lest it appear that I lack reflexivity, let me make it quite clear that I have used social indicator comparative measures myself on many occasions in the past for two key reasons. But I prefer the notion of difference according to mainstream social indicators to the potentially offensive “gaps”.
First, social indicators from the census provide as good a statistical basis for holding the state accountable for its performance — according to its normative criteria — as currently exists. This is particularly the case because official statistics collected by the ABS have a degree of independence from government and so are somewhat better than the government’s own assessment of its performance.
Second, official census statistics are a sound basis for assessing certain needs, like housing, and to assist in the calculation of equitable needs-based support. Calculating differences between social groups in Australian society can assist estimation of the quantum of funding required to address need, but is of limited help for assessing sustained outcomes.
In last month’s Crikey I noted that a judgment day will come when 2011 Census data are available and some forms of objective assessment will be possible of the government’s approach using its own criteria of success.
With time, there will be careful and transparent analysis of first release (June 2012) and second release (October 2012) census data, prescribed community by prescribed community, priority community by priority community, Territory Growth Town by Territory Growth Town.
A sense of the forthcoming analytic deluge can be demonstrated with my early assessment of changes in a handful of available social indicators in the NT. I do this here with two tables of comparable statistical evidence from the 2006 and 2011 Censuses with apologies to anyone who might be offended by the reduction of people to numbers and percentages.
The first table looks at absolute change for two income variables (adjusted for inflation), two education, one demographic, three housing and a cultural variable.
Table 1: Indigenous outcomes in the Northern Territory, 2006 and 2011.
Indigenous outcome 2006 |
Indigenous outcome 2011 |
|
Median personal income | $248 | $269 |
Median household income | $965 | $1098 |
Completed year 12 | 10.0% | 14.7% |
Attending university, other tertiary | 1.3% | 1.3% |
Population 65 years plus | 3.2% | 3.4% |
Home ownership rate | 11.2% | 12.2% |
Average number of people per bedroom | 1.8 | 1.7 |
Average household size | 4.5 | 4.2 |
Indigenous language spoken at home | 60.3% | 65.1% |
Information in the table shows is that in absolute terms most things have incrementally improved: median income has inched up, the year 12 completion rate has increased, university attendance has remained stable, the proportion of the population aged over 65 years has grown marginally, and home ownership has increased, while overcrowding and household size have declined. Interestingly, even a cultural variable “indigenous language spoken at home” has increased.
Some difference, like in home ownership, can be partly explained by the nature of land tenure, while others like overcrowding reflect insufficient provision of community, now public, housing. Other differences in median individual and household income (with the latter understated owing to very different household size) reflect lack of economic opportunity, poverty and non recognition in the census of non-monetary income.
This all looks like good news for current policy settings — at least nothing appears to be going backwards in absolute terms.The second table looks at ratios, or differences, between indigenous and non-indigenous Australians. The story here, recalling that the policy during most of this five-year comparative period was called Closing the Gap in the NT, is very different.
Table 2: Indigenous/non indigenous relative outcomes in the Northern Territory, 2006 and 2011.
Indigenous/non indigenous ratio 2006 |
Indigenous/non indigenous ratio 2011 |
|
Median personal income | 0.30 | 0.29 |
Median household income | 0.63 | 0.61 |
Completed year 12 | 0.21 | 0.27 |
Attending university, other tertiary | 0.25 | 0.23 |
Population 65 years plus | 0.58 | 0.51 |
Home ownership | 0.28 | 0.33 |
Average number of people per bedroom | 1.6 | 1.5 |
Average household size | 1.8 | 1.6 |
Indigenous language spoken at home | 424.2 | 422.8 |
First, let’s look at the ratios in both 2006 and 2011. For socio-economic differences to be eliminated the indigenous to non-indigenous ratios should all be 1.0. What is very clear is that everywhere so-called gaps are significant and non-indigenous people are far better off than indigenous people on average.
The one area where indigenous people clearly outperform non-indigenous people is in indigenous language use at home by a factor of over 400.
This variable is included here to demonstrate how culture relative social indicators can be, what might be a high priority for one group in a diverse society may not be a priority for another, even the vast majority.
In August 2011 (census day), the socioeconomic differences that were supposed to be closed by June 2012 at least in the Howard government “stabilise, normalise, exit” iteration of the intervention remain a wide open chasm; unless “normalise” referred cynically to the maintenance or naturalisation of statistical difference.
The Rudd and Gillard governments’ intervention was less ambiguous: it was a National Partnership Agreement to Close the Gap in the Northern Territory. This terminology might not to be intended at face value, especially as the Agreement ended on 30 June 2012 without any closures. Perhaps it too is a metaphor for normalisation. But it does raise two important issues.
First, is the extent of the statistical differences identified in Table 2 after four years of paternalistic intervention and additional expenditure of between $1-2 billion acceptable?
Second, when one compares ratios for 2006 and 2011 it is clear that while some differences are inching closer (year 12 completion, home ownership, household size and overcrowding) others are inching apart (individual and household income, university attendance and longevity). Even where differences are inching closer it will take centuries rather than decades for gaps to be eliminated.
The cultural gulf in indigenous language use at home is also inching closer, but this reflects the fact that some non-indigenous people are claiming indigenous language use at home, with the absolute rate of use for indigenous people (in Table 1) actually increasing from 60% to 65%.
My aim in referring to some of these statistics is not to render the indigenous development challenge in the NT technical in a state-like manner. Nor is it to suggest that the goal of Closing the Gap according to imposed mainstream norms is a legitimate policy approach.
Rather, I aim to show that the suite of neoliberal governance measures deployed by the state is not, and likely never will, eliminate socioeconomic difference. And if this is clear to me from preliminary analysis of census evidence it is also clear to the Australian government that has likely marshalled a cohort of eager Canberra-based bureaucrats to scrutinise these very same statistics — and if they told a good news story be sure that they would be plastered all over the Murdoch media by now.
In the dead of night in the early hours of 29 June 2012, the Australian Senate passed the inhumane Stronger Futures Bills that will continue the intervention for another 10 years. Yet already available evidence from the 2011 Census shows that socio-economic differences are not vanishing and it is extraordinarily worrying that censuses in 2016 and 2021 might reveal similar outcomes.
If the current approach is not Closing the Gap according to the state’s own normative criteria, why is there such a dogmatic commitment to its expensive continuation?
Three possibilities come to mind: first, the government is too locked into and has invested too many taxpayer dollars in one particular approach to admit that it is destined to fail; second, opinion polling indicates to both major parties that there are votes in continuing punitive “tough love” measures directed at indigenous Australians irrespective of whether they work or not; and third, there is a strong ideological commitment to “discipline and punish” indigenous people in the NT, again irrespective of whether there is evidence that such a brutal approach is actually improving outcomes.
Evidently an approach to policy making that is not evidence based is acceptable in liberal democratic Australia, at least when dealing with its most marginalised citizens. Evidently too the strict accountability criteria applied by the state apparatus to Aboriginal community effort, now all deemed failure, do not apply to the state. A grand and expensive social engineering experiment has been underway for five years, with no clear evidence of success. It is now to continue as the relabelled “Stronger Futures in the Northern Territory” laws to 2022, irrespective of performance or of outcomes.
* Jon Altman is a social sciences research professor at the Centre for Aboriginal Economic Policy Research at the Australian National University. A version of this article was originally published in Tracker.
Jon
Thanks for the useful analysis of these data from the last two censuses.
Even more interesting and useful would be to compare the same data categories from the previous three or four censuses with these ones, so clearer long term trends may be discerned. Would it be possible for you to put such a table together and publish it?
Secondly, I agree that the ‘Closing the Gap’ approach is probably not the most useful one that could be taken, as it does obscure or neglect some Indigenous values and aspirations, and so probably fails to fully enlist, or reflect, the benefits of Indigenous engagement in
certain areas.
However the Commonwealth government should be given some credit for achieving small improvements in the face of enormous difficulties, against a backdrop of great need and dire problems, some of which are seemingly insoluble. The fact that particular ‘Gaps’ may never be fully closed by achieving this rate of progress does not invalidate efforts to try making improvements.
In some areas, the small improvements being seen could be the sign of the beginninings of significant ‘turnarounds’occurring, and these may well be the
platforms needed for beginning to achieve greater rates of improvement, and possibly eventually closing larger parts of these gaps.
The really useful lesson might be obtained from some form of
cost-benefit analysis, where this is feasible, to identify what the benefits of different types of investment of these monies might be in relation to Indigenous wellbeing, autonomy and economic development.
Business and government tell us it doesn’t matter so much when people suffer, because success is measured in dollars. When it’s obvious a choice or set of actions has actually lost money, they shift focus again. It’s all about “‘looking forward” and aspirational statements without any real KPIs.
Harming people is wrong. Wasting money is devaluing the effort of the people who produced it. Perhaps it’s time we remembered that society is all about the people who comprise it.
Indigenous society can teach us a lot in that respect.
Hear Hear Clytie!
Professor you are selectively misrepresenting statistics to support your moral position on the intervention. The fact that socio economic division is greater between 2006 and 2011 may reflect that non indigenous groups have simply improved faster or greater.NOT that the intervention hasn’t helped. You should compare non intervention communities, measure arrest rates, domestic violence, school attendance in total etc. ps I make no judgement on your moral stance.
There are many academics out there who understand that the intervention is only the most recent of 200+ years of intervention, all of which has had negative impact upon Aboriginal people. You can’t take away a peoples’ country and culture without expecting dysfunction. What the government seems most keen to do, as it always has done, is to keep these people further under their control, presumably because they feel they know best, or perhaps just because they enjoy this. This is more than a little ironic, and sad, and I wish that people would have enough sense to realise this can’t possibly help, but they don’t.