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 Australians keep leaving the bush: atlas 

Australians keep leaving the bush: atlas

18/04/2008 7:36:00 AM
Australians keep leaving the bush for the city - and rural communities are getting smaller and older, according to a new social atlas.

The Federal Government's atlas paints a picture of rural communities in population decline.

Young people and families are heading to cities, regional towns and coastal boom towns, looking for jobs and education.

The drought has exacerbated the drift, the atlas found.

But it's not all bad news for the bush - rural people are closing the gap on education, they're in work and hooked up to the internet, and they're more likely to own their own home.

The atlas found Australia's big towns and cities are getting bigger, while small rural communities are getting smaller.

The rural population is declining by just under 1pc a year, with a 2pc annual decline in the number of children.

Rural communities are ageing faster, and have a higher average age, than the rest of the country.

"The social circumstances of many people, communities and towns have changed as the movement of young people and families to regional and major urban centres for better employment and education opportunities has accelerated," the atlas found.

Major cities grew by 8pc in the five years to 2006, and coastal towns and cities boomed too.

Queensland was the epicentre of coastal growth, particularly the Gold Coast, Maroochydore and Cairns.

Interstate, Geelong in Victoria and Newcastle in NSW grew strongly.

Almost two-thirds of Australians live in capital cities.

Agriculture Minister Tony Burke said the report confirmed that people, especially young families, were leaving smaller rural communities.

However, he focussed on the positives as he launched the report in Melbourne Thursday, pointing to high labour participation rates, vocational training take-up and home ownership in rural areas.

"These figures reinforce what we already know about people living in the bush - they're resilient, highly skilled and passionate about their communities," Mr Burke said.

The report found a relatively high proportion of young people in rural areas are in school, and the number of people without qualifications had fallen sharply.

People in rural areas are more likely to have a vocational degree or certificate than the national average.

The atlas is also interesting news for single women in the bush - there are 25pc more young males than females in rural areas.

Cities and regional centres had more women than men.

The atlas, called "Country Matters, a Social Atlas of Rural and Regional Australia", is prepared every five years for the Department of Agriculture, Fisheries and Forestry. It is used by the government to develop policies and programs.

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Comments


Date: Newest first | Oldest first
Economic rationalists will say that the decline of small towns is the market at work.

This of course is BS - the cause is the agglomeration effects of people herding into the capitals.

Surely the Rudd Government could devise a sensible decentralisation policy.

Posted by Silverhawk on 21/04/2008 3:47:10 PM
Maybe everybody should give Barnaby Joyce's idea to potentially have a differential taxation scheme just a little bit more consideration? Help the people in the inland areas cope with the higher prices for most goods by giving them a 5pc tax benefit and help them move out to our inland areas where there is more water/ less congestion and more vacant urban land to build houses on, threfor saving the billions of dollars we are spending on cross-city tunnels etc etc, possibly worth considering a little more thoroughly, Sam
Posted by Sam on 22/04/2008 8:36:53 AM
They call it economic rationalism but there is nothing rational about this economics. This depopulation of rural Australia is caused by the exceedingly foolish policy of leading by example in the Quixotic quest for the Utopian "free market" which has been promoted by our own lobby and pursued by all political parties.
Posted by Ted O'Brien on 23/04/2008 4:05:58 AM

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