12 October 2025

Australians are losing hope in the future - and Canberrans aren't exempt

| By James Coleman
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Higher rates of loneliness, especially among young people, are driven, in part, by financial stressors. Photo: University of Canberra.

A new University of Canberra (UC) study has revealed a decline in the mood of the capital, with thousands of locals reporting a drop in confidence in Australia’s future.

The ‘Living Well in the ACT Region’ survey, now in its sixth year, polled 3110 adult ACT residents about their “wellbeing, resilience, and the liveability of their community”.

According to lead researcher Professor Jacki Schirmer, the results echo a troubling trend unfolding across Australia, driven by rising living costs.

“The results in the ACT certainly reflect nationwide and international trends, where we’ve seen an overall decline in wellbeing and happiness in recent years,” she said.

“There’s a whole lot of things driving that, but one of the big ones is people are losing confidence in the future. Fewer people are feeling like they’ll be better off in a few years’ time. Fewer people feel like they’ll even be as well off in five years’ time as they are now.

“It’s also about whether they will be able to afford a house? Will they be able to achieve the things they want to in life? And for some people, it’s also concerns about the impacts of climate change on their future.”

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This year’s UC study found that over half of respondents have changed their food purchasing habits and reduced heating and cooling usage, while more than a third have delayed medical appointments due to the cost.

The issues identified are not just financial, but also emotional.

Nearly 19 per cent of respondents aged 30 to 49 years old said they often or always feel lonely, which is well above the survey average of 12.4 per cent.

“In particular, 30 to 49-year-olds are feeling the worst off. They’re the ones who tend to have the larger mortgages, they’ve got kids they’re taking care of, which is keeping them very busy, and we’re seeing amongst that age group that people are becoming increasingly lonely, as well as experiencing financial stress,” Prof Schirmer said.

UC Professor Jacki Schirmer

UC Professor Jacki Schirmer. Photo: University of Canberra.

The time Canberrans have spent connecting socially has also returned concerning results, with two in five Canberrans cancelling social events in 2024.

“People are feeling like they can’t afford mainstream things or even the day-to-day things. So, they’re saying things [in the survey] like ‘I can’t afford to go out to the restaurant with friends because I need to keep that money for other things’, so that higher rate of loneliness we’re seeing is in part driven by those financial stressors.

“It’s also driven by people being busy, and in general, Canberra has a little bit of a lower sense of social connection than other cities, possibly because we have a lot of people who come from elsewhere to live here, and it can take a while to build those really meaningful social connections.”

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On the plus side, time spent attending community events and volunteering increased between 2023 and 2024, making its way back to the levels that were seen in the first ‘Living Well in the ACT Region’ survey back in 2019.

Canberra also remains among the best places to live in Australia, according to the study.

“We learned that Canberra continues to be an incredibly liveable city, with 89 per cent of Canberrans reporting that their local area is really liveable – that is a much higher percentage than the national average,” Prof Schirmer said.

Fewer Canberrans are going out. Photo: ACT Government.

The UC survey is now in its fifth year and has collected data eight times since 2019. The results are incorporated into the ACT Government’s ‘Wellbeing Framework’, which is used to inform investment decisions in each year’s budget.

“The government will use reporting from the Framework to help inform Budget priority areas that will assist in the development and prioritisation of initiatives,” the Framework document reads.

Going forward, Prof Schirmer is confident wellbeing levels will rise again – in a similar situation to what followed the pandemic.

“When the COVID-19 pandemic hit, we saw a real decrease in our wellbeing in the first lockdown, but by the second one, we’d figured out how we could actually live well even in a pandemic, and wellbeing rates rose again,” Professor Schirmer said.

“I think that shows us that we can learn to adapt and change – and that we can again work to support those at risk of low wellbeing and help improve these levels of wellbeing again.”

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“What a strange thing then is this great civilisation… Step by step, as villages grew larger, men must give up the free wondering life of berry picking and seed gathering and tie themselves to the security and drudgery of agriculture. Step by step, as villages grew more numerous, men must renounce the excitement of the hunt for the security and drudgery of castle keeping. Then at last it was like Frankenstein’s vast monster. They had not willed it, but it ruled them all.”
George R Stewart ‘Earth Abides’

Your proposal being, gathering berries and hunting wombats for food in small villages of the uneducated after exterminating people we could no longer feed, while dying from injuries and disease?

For a while now, the media felt confident in its ability to tell people not to believe their lying eyes – and for a while before now the media had good reason to believe they could do it.

But this could only go on for so long before the scales started to fall from people’s eyes: the promise of progress was just a big fat lie and the excuses constantly given were meant to disguise this.

And now the whole experiment lays bare for all to see: where indeed can people find hope in abject hopelessness?

And the *conservative ‘conspiracy theorists’ were right, of course, as per usual: telling people where this was all going, from the very start.

*not to be confused with well-meaning but confused Liberal voters and the like.

And here’s some more friendly advice from your local ‘conspiracy theorist’: don’t believe – even for a second – the solutions they come up with, which will only be an extension of the trajectory we’re on.

“And the *conservative ‘conspiracy theorists’ were right,”….nope.

Canberra’s improved a lot over the years, I feel safer walking Civic at night. But the culture makes it difficult to develop and maintain connections with friendships and relationships, networking is impossible, Real Estate is overpriced. Even though I get paid more now I still expect to experience homelessness at some point. It’s disturbing how many Hobbo’s I see in Civic and the suburbs and how many people I’ve met who’ve been homeless at some point in their lives.

Incidental Tourist9:28 pm 12 Oct 25

I can’t help thinking that Capitalism is unequal distribution of wealth and Socialism is an equal distribution of misery.

Welcome to socialism. It slowly eats away at the economy and drags overall standards of living down. Under the Albanese government Australia has suffered the biggest fall in living standards in the OECD. Their path of high population growth means we will not close the gap between actual dwellings and demand for dwellings, so housing affordability will continue to worsen. This will keep upwards pressure on inflation and limit the RBA’s ability to drop rates to boost the economy.

Canberra has the extra burden of the Barr government which has been aggressively lifting both taxes and borrowings while failing to provide top notch government services. They’ve now run out of other people’s money and we’re facing both further tax hikes and reductions in government spending.

Clinton had it right with “it’s the economy, stupid” – something too many Australians and Canberrans have forgotten or never learned in the first place. Unfortunately we’re currently showcasing Churchill’s “democracy is the worst form of government, except for all the other ones”.

Where is socialism? Quite the fantasy world you lot live in. Meanwhile Clinton largely continued the policies of Regan in hollowing out the middle and working classes.

https://www.jstor.org/stable/j.ctvdtphw1

Danger Mouse9:00 pm 12 Oct 25

‘Welcome to socialism’

I’d assume you don’t take care of Medicare, tax rebates,free education for children and the million other subsidies you don’t realise you are using?

That socialist junk..

For a Socialist territory we’re not very sociable. Try having a conversation with a total stranger, or message someone and see if they respond or for how long. LOL

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