If you follow this blog you will have noticed that I favour population analysis from a spatial perspective. In this day and age headline numbers get clicks, but it's not until you look at the differences across metropolitan areas that you gain a better perspective of how our cities are changing. In 2017-18, Greater Melbourne grew by 2.5%, or 119,420 people. But how was this growth spread across Melbourne? SA2 data released by the ABS provides a fine-grained perspective on population change - read on to find out more.
Monday, April 22, 2019
Monday, April 8, 2019
South Australia enjoys modest population growth
South Australia is another state that gets overlooked in the current environment of strong population growth. For many years South Australia has recorded modest population growth, without the extremes of localised growth recorded in parts of Melbourne and Sydney. In 2017-18, South Australia recorded a population growth rate of 0.7%, below the national figure of 1.6%, to reach a population of 1.74 million. Greater Adelaide's growth rate in 2017-18 was slightly higher at 0.8%. What population trends are evident in South Australia? Read on to find out.
Monday, April 1, 2019
Population trends in Darwin
With all the attention on issues of population growth and immigration in our largest cities, population trends in our smaller cities has tended to slip under the radar. Recent population data from the ABS confirms that the Northern Territory (NT) recorded a decline in population in 2017-18. This is primarily due to increasing levels of net interstate migration loss. However, there are spatial differences across the NT, and this blog looks at population change in the Greater Darwin region in 2017-18.
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