SEIFA
Socio-Economic Indexes for Areas is a product that summarizes the relative socio-economic characteristics of Australian communities. The indexes have been created by the Australian Bureau of Statistics, the national statistical agency. The source of the data is derived from the five-yearly Census of Population and Housing, and is calculated using principal component analysis.
Domains and variables
First produced following the 1971 Census, SEIFA is primarily used to rank areas according to socio-economic advantage and disadvantage based on census data. The census variables include household income, education, employment, occupation, housing and other indicators of advantage and disadvantage. Combined, the indexes provide more general measures of socio-economic status than is given by measuring any one of the variables in isolation. SEIFA consists of four indexes, each being a summary of a different set of census variables:Calculation method
is used to create SEIFA. This method creates a summary measure of a group of variables, in this case related to socio-economic advantage and disadvantage.In a paper presented by the Queensland Department of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Policy at the Australian Population Association 2004 conference, it was claimed that SEIFA was not an accurate measure of social and economic disadvantage for Indigenous Australians, especially where SEIFA is used at a small area level, and the populations or households in each area are relatively homogeneous.