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How Australia Compares

How Australia Compares

How Australia Compares

2nd Edition
Rodney Tiffen, University of Sydney
Ross Gittins
November 2009
Available
Paperback
9780521712453
£76.00
GBP
Paperback
USD
eBook

    How Australia Compares is a handy reference that compares Australia with seventeen other developed countries across a wide range of social, economic and political dimensions. Whenever possible, it gives not only snapshot comparisons from the present, but charts trends over recent decades or even longer. Encyclopaedic in scope, it provides statistics for a huge range of human activity, from taxation to traffic accidents, homicide rates to health expenditure, interest rates to internet usage. This new edition is fully revised and updated, and features two new chapters: The Howard Impact and The Search for Scoreboards. New sections include obesity, advertising, broadband internet access, childcare and corruption. Information is highly accessible with double-page spreads for each topic. Tables and graphs are presented on one page, and clear explanation and analysis on the facing page. In each discussion the focus is to put the Australian experience into international perspective, drawing out the implications for the nation's performance, policies and prospects.

    • This new edition is fully revised and updated. It features two new chapters: The Howard Impact and The Search for Scoreboards
    • Contains dozens of new statistics on a wide range of topics, including obesity, advertising, broadband internet access, public and private health spending, imprisonment, transport, childcare and corruption
    • Compares and contrasts Australia with 17 other developed democracies

    Product details

    November 2009
    Paperback
    9780521712453
    294 pages
    244 × 170 × 16 mm
    0.47kg
    Available

    Table of Contents

    • 1. People
    • 2. Government and politics
    • 3. Economy
    • 4. Work and the labour force
    • 5. Government taxes and spending
    • 6. Health
    • 7. Education
    • 8. Inequality and social welfare
    • 9. International relations
    • 10. Environment
    • 11. Science and technology
    • 12. Telecommunications and computing
    • 13. Media
    • 14. Family
    • 15. Lifestyles and consumption
    • 16. Crime and social problems
    • 17. The search for scoreboards
    • 18. The Howard impact.
      Authors
    • Rodney Tiffen , University of Sydney

      Rod Tiffen is Associate Professor, Government and International Relations, University of Sydney.

    • Ross Gittins

      Ross Gittens is Economics Editor, Sydney Morning Herald.