I wonder whether the whole census concept should be re-architected?

Much of the information could be supplied from existing government databases 
without going near the public Internet (ATO, Immigration, Health, state 
databases such as births, deaths, and marriages, etc.).  Some of it, such as 
personal income, would probably be more reliable.

There's a theorem in statistics known as the Central Limit Theorem if my memory 
is correct, and this states that the accuracy of a "well behaved" sample 
depends on the absolute size of that sample, not on the proportion of the total 
population which it represents.  (Politicians often fail to understand that.)  
So once the internally assembled data was analysed, the rest of the "census" 
process could be conducted on a sampling basis by face-to-face interviews.  It 
could be treated as an audit of the assembled data and a fleshing-out of 
aspects of interest identified thereform, such as English language proficiency.

David L.
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