Australia's regions to suffer economic impact of coronavirus migration drop, Treasury says

Parts of regional Australia that relied on migration to drive population growth will be hardest hit during the coronavirus border closures.

The City of Wagga Wagga is one of the areas to witness a significant drop in migration.

The City of Wagga Wagga is one of the areas to witness a significant drop in migration. Source: Supplied

Migrants drove more than a quarter of regional Australia's population growth before the coronavirus pandemic forced border closures.

Treasury's Centre for Population officials on Tuesday told a parliamentary inquiry that overseas migration was behind 26 per cent of regional population growth nationally.

In certain areas, the figure was more than 50 per cent.

Those included New England and Riverina in NSW, Warrnambool in southest Victoria and the northwest region of that state.
Migrants were also responsible for about half of all migration to WA's wheat belt and resource-rich southern outback.

In Queensland, overseas migrants to Toowoomba and Cairns represented around 30 per cent of all growth, while in the Sunshine Coast and Darling Downs it was closer to the national average.

Centre for Population principal adviser Merrick Peisley said the future of border closures and Australia's attractiveness as a destination for migrants would have a major influence.

"With net overseas migration expected to fall, regions that rely on overseas migration for population growth will likely be hardest hit," he told the hearing on Tuesday.
Australia's leaders have agreed to reduce the number of flights from India.
Australia's annual migration numbers are expected to drop to 31,000 a year. Source: AAP
Net overseas migration is expected to fall from 232,000 in 2018/19 to 154,000 in 2019/20.

The most dramatic drop will be in 2020/21 when the net number of migrants coming to Australia is expected to be 31,000.

Australia's population is also forecast to fall from 1.2 per cent in 2019/20 to 0.6 per cent the following financial year.

"Australia's population growth is set to be the lowest in over 100 years due to COVID-19," Mr Peisley said.
"It's unclear where population growth will be heading over the medium to long term, as you can appreciate from the volatility."

Fertility is expected to fall temporarily as people delay having children during the pandemic.

Based on preliminary Australian Bureau of Statistics data, deaths will increase slightly in the short-term because of coronavirus.


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Published 28 July 2020 8:56pm
Source: AAP



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