Australia
may be the "lucky country"
but its indigenous people
are not so fortunate when
it comes to longevity.
Figures recently released
by the Australian Bureau of
Statistics show that Australians
are among the longest-living
people in the world, with
an average lifespan of 78.5
years for males and 83.3 years
for females born "Down Under."
But the figures drop by
around 17 years for indigenous
Australians, whose average
life expectancy in 2001
was 59.4 years for males
and 64.8 for females.
Several factors, including
poverty, discrimination,
substance abuse and poor
access to health, are believed
to affect the lifespan of
these original Australians.
For the rest of the nation,
the capital Canberra --
often derided as boring
and soulless -- is statistically
the best place to sustain
a long life.
The lakeside city's 325,000
people enjoy the longest
average lifespan, with women
living to 84 years and most
men to 79.9.
Built to resolve a bitter
1908 dispute between Sydney
and Melbourne over which
should be capital, modern
Canberra has the wealthiest
and best-educated population
in Australia.
The city's unemployment
rate hovers at barely 2.8
percent, while weekly wages
are well above the Australian
average at A$1,208,
backed by a booming information
technology industry and
government salaries.
At the other end of the
scale is the sparsely populated
outback Northern Territory,
cinematic home to "Crocodile
Dundee."
The territory accounts
for only 1 percent of Australia's
20 million population.
Men there live to 72.5
years on average, while
women live to 78.2. More
than a quarter of the population
are aboriginal Australians,
who often live on remote
communities with poor access
to jobs, health and education
services and have one of
the lowest life expectancies.
Australia's nationwide
average life expectancy
for males is exceeded only
by Iceland and Hong Kong
while the female life expectancy
is exceeded by Japan and
Hong Kong.