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“Multiculturalism doesn’t just happen. It requires deliberate government action, targeted investments, and leadership”

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Exclusive interview with Hon. Julian Hill, Assistant Minister for Multicultural Affairs

Introduction

In a comprehensive interview with Sameway Magazine, Hon. Julian Hill, Assistant Minister for Citizenship and Multicultural Affairs, discussed his vision for advancing multiculturalism in Australia. Addressing critical themes such as ethnic media, misinformation, leadership diversity, and community support, Minister Hill outlined the government’s commitment to fostering inclusivity and building a cohesive society. His thoughtful responses provide a framework for how Australia can navigate the complexities of its growing multicultural population while strengthening its democratic and social foundations.

Multiculturalism as a National Strength

Minister Hill opened the discussion by emphasizing that Australia’s multicultural success is not accidental but the result of deliberate policies, investments, and leadership. He described multiculturalism as one of Australia’s defining features, yet one that requires ongoing effort to maintain and enhance.

“Multiculturalism doesn’t just happen,” Minister Hill stated firmly. “It requires deliberate government action, targeted investments, and leadership.” Reflecting on the 50th anniversary of the Racial Discrimination Act, he highlighted the act’s transformative role in fostering equality and fairness in Australia.

The ongoing Multicultural Framework Review was a key topic in this context. Minister Hill called the review a significant step in reassessing policies to better serve CALD (Culturally and Linguistically Diverse) communities. Minister Hill believed that this review provided a strategic foundation for tackling systemic issues and ensuring that our multicultural policies would be fit for the future.

Leadership diversity in Australia was also discussed as an essential factor in building an inclusive society. Minister Hill acknowledged progress in this area, citing the increasing representation of multicultural Australians in Parliament. However, he noted that more work is needed to ensure leadership reflects the diversity of the Australian population.

“you know, that increasing diversity that you’ll see in the parliament is actually really important to give that signal of inclusion and belonging to all Australians, including new Australians.” he remarked.

Ethnic Media – A Vital Bridge for CALD Communities

Minister Hill underscored the critical role ethnic media plays in connecting CALD communities to Australian society. He acknowledged that many migrants rely on ethnic media as their primary source of information, particularly when mainstream outlets fail to address their specific needs.

“I do believe that the independent multicultural media sector is an important part of our multicultural infrastructure if we’re going to be a successful society. They’re trusted voices.” He said.

Minister Hill believed ethnic media in fact are increasing “mainstream”.

“The government strongly supports CALD and independent and community media, which plays a vital role in giving voice to different communities across Australia, but especially those that aren’t adequately covered or represented in so-called mainstream media. I say so-called because I think that increasingly in a diverse country, this conversation we’re having is part of the mainstream.” Minister Hill explained.

Despite its importance, ethnic media faces numerous challenges, including financial instability and limited government support. Minister Hill acknowledged these issues, noting that initiatives like the $15 million News Media Relief Program and the $27 million Community Broadcasting Program aim to provide much-needed support to independent and multicultural media outlets. However, he recognized that these funds alone are insufficient to address the sector’s challenges comprehensively.

“the framework review has made a number of suggestions and recommendations which we’ll be considering and we are considering actively.” Minister Hill added.

Minister Hill also emphasized the need for ethnic media to engage in consultations and collaborate with mainstream media to amplify their reach. By working together, ethnic and mainstream media can create innovative solutions to ensure that CALD communities remain informed and connected.

As the peak body for multicultural community broadcasters, the National Ethnic and Multicultural Broadcasters’ Council (NEMBC) has placed a proposal to the Federal Government to address the challenges outlined by Minister Hill.

“We are proposing to work with the Federal Government on a project that will help multicultural broadcasters tackle big challenges like disinformation, media literacy, funding and governance, while building strong ties with our public institutions.

By giving broadcasters the tools to share accurate information and stay sustainable, we strengthen multicultural voices and promotes an inclusive Australia that celebrates diversity and unity.

Strong media diversity builds a stronger community.” As said by Juan Paolo Legaspi , NEMBC President)

The Minister expressed concern about how funding for ethnic media has often been deprioritized in favour of mainstream outlets. He urged policymakers to view ethnic media as an integral part of Australia’s information ecosystem.

Combating Misinformation in CALD Communities

Minister Hill believed the government has funded SBS to provide news and information to CALD communities. He believed that Chinese Australians are obtaining information from a diversified source.

“We do have some really good evidence and research that confirms Chinese Australians and all the different parts of the really diverse Chinese Australian community use a whole multitude of media services. So I just make that point at the outset. There is already a strong contestability of information sources and views.” Minister Hill expressed.

Clearly the perception of Minister Hill is incompatible with researches done in Australia. In a Google news summit held in last October, disinformation targeted at CALD communities had been mentioned as a threat to the security of Australia.

Minister Hill pointed out that many migrants in Australia are receiving information from their home countries as well as local sources.  He had trusted that Australians will be smart enough to be able to sought out accurate information from these diversified sources. Clearly media specialists do not agree with this.

To address this issue, the government is partnering with organizations like the Federation of Ethnic Communities Councils of Australia (FECCA) to develop media literacy programs. These initiatives aim to equip CALD communities with the skills to critically evaluate information and identify credible sources.

“Media literacy is to find good media sources and be aware of what they’re consuming.” Minister Hill emphasized.

However Minister Hill contradicted himself in saying “I’m concerned … with the active use of social media platforms, including in particular those closed groups on WhatsApp, on WeChat ….on bad information spreads very quickly, complete nonsense [during election campaign]. And the Liberal Party were caught out in previous elections, actively spreading lies about the Labor Party. And, you know, it’s something that We were not always quick enough to respond to, and it’s a real risk to democracy when In language material is used to spread complete lies.”

It is obviously impossible that WhatsApp and WeChat or other platforms will be used only to spread disinformation during election for “lies” that become real risks to democracy but effective in helping migrants to master reliable and accurate information in other aspects.

Minister Hill clearly needed to give more evidence in substantiate his argument.

The Decline of Language Education and its Implications

Minister Hill lamented the declining emphasis on foreign language education in Australia, describing it as a missed opportunity for cultural exchange and global engagement. He praised community language schools for their efforts in preserving linguistic heritage and fostering bilingualism among young Australians.

“Foreign language learning by people born in Australia has not been improving and in many areas has been going backwards over the last 10, 15 years. It’s getting worse, not better. We haven’t seen enough Australians learning a second language. And that’s particularly important for Asian languages.” He warned.

“this is a huge problem in Australia as well as an opportunity.”

Minister Hill highlighted the strategic importance of learning Asian languages, particularly Mandarin, in strengthening Australia’s ties with the Asia-Pacific region. He also noted that language education helps migrants preserve intergenerational relationships.

“That was just part of our multicultural society. And these days, you know, there’s people whose kids go to those language schools. They’re absolutely fantastic part of Australian society. They’re good for the kids’ mental development, they’re good for their cultural identity, it’s good for them to be able to communicate with their grandparents, but it’s also really good for our country that people acquire those language skills.”

He is interested to do more to support these schools so they can continue their vital work.

Supporting CALD Communities in Times of Crisis

The discussion also touched on the government’s response to CALD communities during crises, such as the COVID-19 pandemic. Minister Hill noted that ethnic media played a pivotal role in disseminating critical health information to CALD Australians during the pandemic.

When questioned whether the federal government should set up a Department of Multicultural Affairs, Minister Hill was impressed with the team of Home Affairs dedicated to connections with multicultural communities.

“I am genuinely impressed with the quality of the work that the Department of Home Affairs multicultural staff do. We’ve got a network of over 50 staff across Australia who engage every day, weekends, evenings, with multicultural communities.” He said.

Minister Hill believed that leadership of the political parties determine the success of CALD Australia to face the challenge of crisis in different parts of the world. The leader in government should unite instead of divide the communities. He praised the Prime Minister Albanese and Foreign Minister Penny Wong in their skills and success in helping Australians to face the challenge.

“And conflicts that happen in other parts of the world, we’re a globally connected society. Conflicts in other parts of the world can and do impact daily life here because people have family, they have friends and loved ones. And, you know, I will stand on the government’s record, on Senator Wong’s approach, on the Prime Minister’s approach, of calmly trying to bring Australians together and not replicate foreign conflicts and not try and divide Australians to seek votes and domestic political advantage.”

Summary

Assistant Minister Julian Hill’s vision for a cohesive multicultural Australia is rooted in deliberate policies, targeted investments, and collaborative efforts. His emphasis on supporting ethnic media, combating misinformation, and promoting language education underscores the government’s recognition of CALD communities as vital contributors to Australia’s identity and future.

Minister Hill’s thoughtful responses provide a roadmap for addressing the challenges and opportunities in Australia’s multicultural society. His final remarks encapsulate his commitment to inclusivity: “At the end of the day, as Australians, we have more in common than we have difference, and that’ll be the focus of the government heading into an election in the next few months, is our plans for Australia for the next three years to build our future.”

Assistant Minister Julian Hill’s vision for multicultural Australia reflects a commitment to inclusivity, equity, and collaboration. His promises to support ethnic media, tackle misinformation, and enhance language education underscore the government’s recognition of CALD communities as vital contributors to Australia’s identity.

Through deliberate policies and targeted investments, Minister Hill aims to ensure that all Australians—regardless of their cultural background—feel valued, informed, and empowered to participate fully in society. This interview offers a compelling roadmap for achieving these goals and serves as a call to action for stakeholders across the media, government, and community sectors to work together in building a cohesive and inclusive Australia.

 

Mr. Raymond Chow

 

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The Limits of Capitalism: Why Can One Person Be as Rich as a Nation?

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On November 6, Tesla’s shareholder meeting passed a globally shocking resolution: with more than 75% approval, it agreed to grant CEO Elon Musk a compensation package worth nearly one trillion US dollars.

According to the agreement, if he can achieve a series of ambitious operational and financial targets in the next ten years— including building a fleet of one million autonomous robotaxis, successfully selling one million humanoid robots, generating up to USD 400 billion in core profit, and ultimately raising Tesla’s market value from about USD 1.4 trillion to USD 8.5 trillion— his shareholding will increase from the current 13% to 25%. When that happens, Musk will not only have firmer control over the company, but may also become the world’s first “trillion-dollar billionaire.”

To many, this is a jaw-dropping number and a reflection of our era: while some people struggle to afford rent with their monthly salary, another kind of “worker” gains the most expensive “wage” in human history through intelligence, boldness, and market faith.

But this raises a question: on what grounds does Musk deserve such compensation? How is his “labor” different from that of ordinary people? How should we understand this capitalist reward logic and its social cost?

Is One Trillion Dollars Reasonable? Why Are Shareholders Willing to Give Him a Trillion?

A trillion-dollar compensation is almost unimaginable to most people. It equals the entire annual GDP of Poland (population 36 million in 2024), or one-quarter of Japan’s GDP. For a single person’s labor to receive this level of reward is truly beyond reality.

Musk indeed has ability, innovative thinking, and has built world-changing products— these contributions cannot be denied. But is he really worth a trillion dollars?

If viewed purely as “labor compensation,” this number makes no sense. But under capitalist logic, it becomes reasonable. For Tesla shareholders, the meaning behind this compensation is far more important than the number itself.

Since Musk invested his personal wealth into Tesla in 2004, he has, within just over a decade, led the company from a “money-burning EV startup” into the world’s most valuable automaker, with market value once exceeding USD 1.4 trillion. He is not only a CEO but a combination of “super engineer” and brand evangelist, directly taking part in product design and intervening in production lines.

Furthermore, Musk’s current influence and political clout make him irreplaceable in Tesla’s AI and autonomous-driving decisions. If he left, the company’s AI strategy and self-driving vision would likely suffer major setbacks. Thus, shareholders value not just his labor, but his ability to steer Tesla’s long-term strategy, brand, and market confidence.

Economically, the enormous award is considered a “high-risk incentive.” Chair Robyn Denholm stated that this performance-based compensation aims to retain and motivate Musk for at least seven and a half more years. Its core logic is: the value of a leader is not in working hours, but in how much they can increase a company’s value, and whether their influence can convert into long-term competitive power. It is, essentially, the result of a “shared greed” under capitalism.

Musk’s Compensation Game

In 2018, Musk introduced a highly controversial performance-based compensation plan. Tesla adopted an extreme “pay-for-results” model for its CEO: he received no fixed salary and no cash bonus. All compensation would vest only if specific goals were met. This approach was unprecedented in corporate governance— tightly tying pay to long-term performance and pushing compensation logic to an extreme.

Musk proposed a package exceeding USD 50 billion at that time. In 2023, he already met all 12 milestones of the 2018 plan, but in early 2024 the Delaware Court of Chancery invalidated it, citing unfair negotiation and lack of board independence. The lawsuit remains ongoing.

A person confident enough to name such an astronomical reward for themselves is almost unheard of. Rather than a salary, Musk essentially signed a bet with shareholders: if he raises Tesla’s valuation from USD 1.4 trillion to USD 8.5 trillion, he earns stock worth hundreds of billions; if he fails, the options are worthless.

For Musk, money may be secondary. What truly matters is securing control and decision-making power, allowing him greater influence within Tesla and across the world. In other words, this compensation is an investment in his long-term influence, not just payment for work.

The Forgotten Workers, Users, and Public Interest

Yet while Tesla pursues astronomical valuation and massive executive compensation, a neglected question emerges: does the company still remember who it serves?

In business, companies prioritize influence, market share, revenue, and growth— the basics of survival and expansion. But corporate profit comes not only from risk-taking investors or visionary leaders; it also relies on workers who labor, consumers who pay, and public systems that allow them to operate.

If these foundations are ignored, lofty visions become towers without roots.

Countless workers worldwide—including Tesla’s own factory workers—spend the same hours and life energy working. Many work 60–70 hours a week, some exceeding 100, bearing physical and mental stress. Yet they never receive wealth, status, or social reward proportionate to their labor.

More ironically, Tesla’s push for automation, faster production, and cost-cutting has brought recurring overwork and workplace injuries. Workers bear the cost of efficiency, but the applause and soaring market value often go only to executives and shareholders.

How then do these workers feel when a leader may receive nearly a trillion dollars from rising share prices?

How Systems Allow Super-Rich Individuals to Exist

To understand how Musk accumulates such wealth, one must consider institutional structures. Different political systems allow vastly different levels of personal wealth.

In authoritarian or communist systems, no matter how capable business elites are, power and assets ultimately belong to the state. In China, even giants like Alibaba and Tencent can be abruptly restructured or restricted, with the state taking stakes or exerting control. Corporate and personal wealth never fully stand independent of state power.

The U.S., by contrast, is the opposite: the government does not interfere with how rich you can become. Its role is to maintain competition, letting the market judge.

Historically, the U.S. government broke up giants like Standard Oil and AT&T— not to suppress personal wealth, but to prevent monopolies. In other words, the U.S. system doesn’t stop anyone from becoming extremely rich; it only stops them from destroying competition.

This makes the Musk phenomenon possible: as long as the market approves, one person may amass nation-level wealth.

Rewriting Democratic Systems

And Musk may be only the beginning. Oxfam predicts five more trillion-dollar billionaires may emerge in the next decade. They will wield power across technology, media, diplomacy, and politics— weakening governments’ ability to restrain them and forcing democracies to confront the challenge of “individual power surpassing institutions.”

Musk is the clearest example. In the 2024 U.S. election, he provided massive funding to Trump, becoming a key force shaping the campaign. He has repeatedly influenced politics in Europe and Latin America, and through his social platform and satellite network has shaped political dynamics. In the Ukraine war and Israel–Palestine conflict, his business decisions directly affected frontline communications.

When tech billionaires can determine elections or sway public opinion, democracy still exists— but increasingly with conditions attached.

Thus, trillion-dollar billionaires represent not only wealth inequality but a coming stress test for democracy and rule of law. When one person’s market power can influence technology, defense, and global order, they wield a force capable of challenging national sovereignty.

When individual market power affects public interest, should governments intervene? Should institutions redraw boundaries?

The Risk of Technological Centralization

When innovation, risk, and governance become concentrated in a few individuals, technology may advance rapidly, but society becomes more fragile.

Technology, once seen as a tool of liberation, risks becoming the extended will of a single leader— if AI infrastructure, energy networks, global communication systems, and even space infrastructure all fall under the power radius of a few tech giants.

This concentration reshapes the “publicness” of technology. Platforms, AI models, satellite networks, VR spaces— once imagined as public squares— are owned not by democratic institutions but private corporations. Technology once promised equality, yet now information is reshaped by algorithms, speech is amplified by wealth, and value systems are defined by a few billionaires.

Can These Goals Even Be Achieved?

Despite everything, major uncertainties remain. Tesla’s business spans EVs, AI, autonomous-driving software, humanoid robots, and energy technology. Every division— production, supply chain, AI, battery tech— must grow simultaneously; if any part fails, the plan collapses.

Market demand is also uncertain. One million robotaxis and one million humanoid robots face technological, regulatory, and consumer barriers.

Global factors matter too: shareholder and market confidence rely on stable supply chains. China is crucial to Tesla’s production and supply, increasing external risk and political exposure. Recent U.S.–China tensions, tariffs, and import policies directly affect Tesla’s pricing and supply strategy. Tesla has reportedly increased North American sourcing and asked suppliers to remove China-made components from U.S.–built vehicles— but the impact remains unclear.

If all goes well, Tesla’s valuation will rise from USD 1.4 trillion to 8.5 trillion, surpassing the combined market value of the world’s largest tech companies. But even without achieving the full target, shareholders may still benefit from Musk’s leadership and value creation.

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Rights of Chinese Older People

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To age with security and dignity is a right every older person deserves, and a responsibility society—especially the government—must not shirk.

I have been writing the column “Seeing the World Through Australia’s Eyes”, and it often makes me reflect: as a Hong Kong immigrant who has lived in Australia for more than 30 years, I am no longer the “Hong Kong person” who grew up there, nor am I a newly arrived migrant fresh off the plane. I am now a true Australian. When viewing social issues, my thinking framework no longer comes solely from my Hong Kong upbringing, but is shaped by decades of observation and experience in Australia. Of course, compared with people born and raised here, my perspectives are still quite different.

This issue of Fellow Travellers discusses the major transformation in Australia’s aged care policy. In my article, I pointed out that this is a rights-based policy reform. For many Hong Kong friends, the idea that “older people have rights” may feel unfamiliar. In traditional Hong Kong thinking, many older people still need to fend for themselves after ageing, because the entire social security system lacks structured provisions for the elderly. Most Hong Kong older adults accept the traditional Chinese belief of “raising children to support you in old age”, expecting the next generation to provide financial and daily-life support. This mindset is almost impossible to find in mainstream Australian society.

Therefore, when Australia formulates aged care policy, it is built upon a shared civic value: to age with support and dignity is a right every older adult should enjoy, and a responsibility society—especially the government—must bear. As immigrants, we may choose not to exercise these rights, but we should instead ask: when society grants every older person these rights, why should our parents and elders deprive themselves of using them?

I remember that when my parents first came to Australia, they genuinely felt it was paradise: the government provided pensions and subsidised independent living units for seniors. Their quality of life was far better than in Hong Kong. Later they lived in an independent living unit within a retirement village, and only needed to use a portion of their pension to enjoy well-rounded living and support services. There were dozens of Chinese residents in the village, which greatly expanded their social circle. My parents were easily content; to them, Australian society already provided far more dignity and security than they had ever expected. My mother was especially grateful to the Rudd government at that time for allowing them to receive a full pension for the first time.

However, when my parents eventually needed to move into an aged care facility for higher-level care, problems emerged: Chinese facilities offering Cantonese services had waiting lists of several years, making it nearly impossible to secure a place. They ended up in a mainstream English-speaking facility connected to their retirement village, and the language barrier immediately became their biggest source of suffering. Only a few staff could speak some Cantonese, so my parents could express their needs only when those staff were on shift. At other times, they had to rely on gestures and guesses, leading to constant misunderstandings. Worse still, due to mobility issues, they were confined inside the facility all day, surrounded entirely by English-speaking residents and staff. They felt as if they were “softly detained”, cut off from the outside world, with their social life completely erased.

After my father passed away, my mother lived alone, and we watched helplessly as she rapidly lost the ability and willingness to communicate with others. Apart from family visits or church friends, she had almost no chance to speak her mother tongue or have heartfelt conversations. Think about it: we assume receiving care is the most important thing, but for older adults who do not speak English, being forced into an all-English environment is equivalent to losing their most basic right to human connection and social participation.

This personal experience shocked me, and over ten years ago I became convinced that providing culturally and linguistically appropriate care—including services in older people’ mother tongues—is absolutely necessary and urgent for migrants from non-English backgrounds. Research also shows that even migrants who speak fluent English today may lose their English ability if they develop cognitive impairment later in life, reverting to their mother tongue. As human lifespans grow longer, even if we live comfortably in English now, who can guarantee we won’t one day find ourselves stranded on a “language island”?

Therefore, I believe the Chinese community has both the responsibility and the need to actively advocate for the construction of more aged care facilities that reflect Chinese culture and provide services in Chinese—especially Cantonese. This is not only for our parents, but possibly for ourselves in the future. The current aged care reforms in Australia are elevating “culturally and linguistically appropriate services” to the level of fundamental rights for all older adults. I see this as a major step forward and one that deserves recognition and support.

I remember when my parents entered aged care, they requested to have Chinese meals for all three daily meals. I patiently explained that Australian facilities typically serve Western food and cannot be expected to provide daily Chinese meals for individual residents—at most, meals could occasionally be ordered from a Chinese restaurant, but they might not meet the facility’s nutrition standards. Under today’s new legislation, what my parents once requested has now become a formal right that society must strive to meet.

I have found that many Chinese older adults actually do not have high demands. They are not asking for special treatment—only for the basic rights society grants every older person. But for many migrants, even knowing what rights they have is already difficult. As first-generation immigrants, our concerns should go beyond careers, property ownership and children’s education; we must also devote time to understanding our parents’ needs in their later years and the rights this society grants them.

I wholeheartedly support Australia’s current aged care reforms, though I know there are many practical details that must still be implemented. I hope the Chinese community can seize this opportunity to actively fight for the rights our elders deserve. If we do not speak up for them, then the more unfamiliar they are with Australia’s system, the less they will know what they can—and should—claim.

In the process of advocating for culturally suitable aged care facilities for Chinese seniors, I discovered that our challenges come from our own lack of awareness about the rights we can claim. In past years, when I saw the Andrews Labor Government proactively expressing willingness to support Chinese older adults, I believed this goodwill would turn smoothly into action. Yet throughout the process, what I saw instead was bureaucratic avoidance and a lack of understanding of seniors’ real needs.

For example, land purchased in Templestowe Lower in 2021 and in Springvale in 2017 has been left idle by the Victorian Government for years. For the officials responsible, shelving the land has no personal consequence, but in reality it affects whether nearly 200 older adults can receive culturally appropriate care. If we count from 2017, and assume each resident stays in aged care for two to three years on average, we are talking about the wellbeing of more than a thousand older adults.

Why has the Victorian Government left these sites unused and refused to hand them to Chinese community organisations to build dedicated aged care facilities? It is baffling. Since last November, these officials—even without consulting the Chinese community—have shifted the land use application toward mainstream aged care providers. Does this imply they believe mainstream providers can better meet the needs than Chinese community organisations? I believe this is a serious issue the Victorian Government must reflect upon. Culturally appropriate aged care is not only about basic care, but also about language, food and social dignity. Without a community-based perspective, these policy shifts risk deepening immigrant seniors’ sense of isolation, rather than fulfilling the rights-based vision behind the reforms.

Raymond Chow

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Rights-Based Approach – Australia’s Aged Care Reform

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The Australian government has in recent years aggressively pushed forward aged care reform, including the new Aged Care Act, described as a “once-in-a-generation reform.” Originally scheduled to take effect in July 2025, it was delayed by four months and officially came into force on November 1.

Elderly Rights Enter the Agenda

The scale of the reform is significant, with the government investing an additional AUD 5.6 billion over five years. Australia’s previous aged care system was essentially based on government and service providers allocating resources, leaving older people to passively receive care. Service quality was inconsistent, and at one point residential aged care facilities were exposed for “neglect, abuse, and poor food quality.” The reform rewrites the fundamental philosophy of the system, shifting from a provider-centred model to one in which older people are rights-holders, rather than passive recipients of charity.

The new Act lists, for the first time, the statutory rights of older people, including autonomy in decision-making, dignity, safety, culturally sensitive care, and transparency of information. In other words, older people are no longer merely service recipients, but participants with rights, able to make requests and challenge services.

Many Chinese migrants who moved to Australia before or after retirement arrived through their children who had already migrated, or settled in Australia in their forties or fifties through skilled or business investment visas. Compared with Hong Kong or other regions, Australia’s aged care services are considered relatively good. Regardless of personal assets, the government covers living expenses, medical care, home care and community activities. Compared with their country of origin, many elderly people feel they are living in an ideal place. Of course, cultural and language differences can cause frustration and inconvenience, but this is often seen as part of the cost of migration.

However, this reform requires the Australian government to take cultural needs into account when delivering aged care services, which represents major progress. The Act establishes a Statement of Rights, specifying that older people have the right to receive care appropriate to their cultural background and to communicate in their preferred language. For Chinese-Australian older people, this is a breakthrough.

Therefore, providing linguistically and culturally appropriate care—such as Chinese-style meals—is no longer merely a reasonable request but a right. Similarly, offering activities such as mahjong in residential care for Chinese elders is considered appropriate.

If care facility staff are unable to provide services in Chinese, the government has a responsibility to set standards, ensuring a proportion of care workers can communicate with older people who do not speak English, or provide support in service delivery. When language barriers prevent aged care residents from having normal social interaction, it constitutes a restriction on their rights and clearly affects their physical and mental health.

A New Financial Model: Means Testing and Co-Payment

Another core focus of the reform is responding to future financial and demographic pressures. Australia’s population aged over 85 is expected to double in the next 20 years, driving a surge in aged care demand. To address this, the government introduced the Support at Home program, consolidating previous home care systems to enable older people to remain at home earlier and for longer. All aged care providers are now placed under a stricter registration and regulatory framework, including mandatory quality standards, transparency reporting and stronger accountability mechanisms.

Alongside the reform, the most scrutinised change is the introduction of a co-payment system and means testing. With the rapidly ageing population, the previous model—where the government bore most costs—is no longer financially sustainable. The new system therefore requires older people with the capacity to pay to contribute to the cost of their care based on income and assets.

For home-based and residential care, non-clinical services such as cleaning, meal preparation and daily living support will incur different levels of co-payment according to financial capacity. For example, low-income pensioners will continue to be primarily supported by the government, while middle-income and asset-rich individuals will contribute proportionally under a shared-funding model. To prevent excessive burden, the government has introduced a lifetime expenditure cap, ensuring out-of-pocket costs do not increase without limit.

However, co-payment has generated considerable public debate. First, the majority of older Australians’ assets are tied to their homes—over 76% own their residence. Although this appears as high asset value, limited cash flow may create financial pressure. There are also concerns that co-payment may cause some families to “delay using services,” undermining the reform’s goal of improving care quality.

Industry leaders also worry that wealthier older people who can afford large refundable accommodation deposits (RADs) may be prioritised by facilities, while those with fewer resources and reliant on subsidies may be placed at a disadvantage.

The Philosophy and Transformation of Australia’s Aged Care

Australia’s aged care policy has not always been centred on older people. Historically, with a young population and high migration, the demand for elder services was minimal, and government support remained supplementary. However, as the baby-boomer generation entered old age and medical advances extended life expectancy, older people became Australia’s fastest-growing demographic. This shift forced the government to reconsider the purpose of aged care.

For decades, the core policy principle has been to avoid a system where “those with resources do better, and those without fall further behind.” The essence of aged care has been to reduce inequality and ensure basic living standards—whether through pensions, public healthcare or government-funded long-term care. This philosophy remains, but rising financial pressure has led to increased emphasis on shared responsibility and sustainability.

Ageing Population Leads to Surging Demand and Stalled Supply

Beyond philosophy, Australia’s aged care system faces a reality: demand is rising rapidly while supply lags far behind. More than 87,000 approved older people are currently waiting for home-care packages, with some waiting up to 15 months. More than 100,000 additional applications are still pending approval. Clearly, the government lacks sufficient staffing to manage the increased workload created by reform. Many older people rely on family support while waiting, or are forced into residential care prematurely. Although wait times have shortened for some, the overall imbalance between supply and demand remains unresolved.

At the same time, longer life expectancy means residential aged care stays are longer, reducing bed turnover. Even with increased funding and new facilities, bed availability remains limited, failing to meet rising demand. This also increases pressure on family carers and drives demand for home-based services.

Differences Between Chinese and Australian Views on Ageing

In Australia, conversations about ageing often reflect cultural contrast. For many older migrants from Chinese backgrounds, the aged care system is unfamiliar and even contradictory to their upbringing. These differences have become more evident under the latest reform, shaping how migrant families interpret means testing and plan for later life.

In traditional Chinese thinking, ageing is primarily a personal responsibility, followed by family responsibility. In places like Hong Kong, older people generally rely on their savings, with a light tax system and limited government role. Support comes mainly in the form of small allowances, such as the Old Age Allowance, which is more of a consumption incentive than part of a care system. Those with serious needs are cared for by children; if children are unable, they may rely on social assistance or move somewhere with lower living costs. In short, the logic is: government supplements but does not lead; families care for themselves.

Australia’s thinking is entirely different. As a high-tax society, trust in welfare is based on a “social contract”: people pay high taxes in exchange for support when disabled, elderly or in hardship. This applies not only to older people but also to the NDIS, carer payments and childcare subsidies. Caring for vulnerable people is not viewed as solely a family obligation but a shared social responsibility. Australians discussing aged care rarely frame it around “filial duty,” but instead focus on service options, needs-based care and cost-sharing between the government and individuals.

Migrants Lack Understanding of the System

These cultural differences are especially evident among migrant families. Many elderly migrants have financial arrangements completely different from local Australians. Chinese parents often invested heavily in their children when young, expecting support later in life. However, upon arriving in Australia, they are often already elderly, lacking pension savings and unfamiliar with the system, and must rely on government pensions and aged care applications. In contrast, local Australians accumulate superannuation throughout their careers and, upon retirement, move into retirement villages or assisted living, investing in their own quality of life rather than relying on children.

Cultural misunderstanding can also lead migrant families to misinterpret the system. Some transfer assets to children early, assuming it will reduce assessable wealth and increase subsidies. However, in Australia, asset transfers are subject to a look-back period, and deeming rules count potential earnings even if money has been transferred. These arrangements may not provide benefits and may instead reduce financial security and complicate applications—what was thought to be a “smart move” becomes disadvantageous.

Conclusion

In facing the new aged care system, the government has a responsibility to communicate widely with migrant communities. Currently, reporting on the reform mainly appears in mainstream media, which many older migrants do not consume. As a result, many only have superficial awareness of the changes, without proper understanding. Without adequate community education, elderly migrants who do not speak English cannot possibly know what rights the law now grants them. If people are unaware of their rights, they naturally cannot assert them. With limited resources, failure to advocate results in neglect and greater inequality. It is time to make greater effort to understand how this era of reform will affect our older people.

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