The pie chart and table delineate the proportion of the population across six different nationalities in Australia and their distribution between city and countryside areas. Overall, Australians constitute the majority of the population, meanwhile most Chinese live in the city rather than the countryside.
To begin with, predominantly almost three-quarters of citizens in Australia are native, which becomes the largest ethnic group, followed by other ethnicities at 14% before British at 7%. Moreover, only 3% of society in Australia are New Zealanders and 2% are Chinese, meanwhile, the remaining 1% of the population are Dutch, which is the minority group.
In the distribution of population in Australia, Chinese substantially live in the city rather than the countryside, with only 1% of Chinese who live there. In contrast, 1 out of 5 Australians stay in rural areas, while the rest in urban areas, followed by 17% which was recorded for the Dutch. Furthermore, for other groups such as New Zealanders and British, approximately nine out of ten of them reside in the metropolis.
