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Demographic and economic impact of mining on remote communities in Australia

journal contribution
posted on 2017-12-06, 00:00 authored by B Kotey, John RolfeJohn Rolfe
The paper analyses the impact of mining on remote statistical local areas (SLAs) in Australia by comparing mining to non-mining SLAs and investigating changes emerging in the two types of SLAs from the resources boom. Specifically, differences are investigated for demographics, industry structure, human capital, income and wealth. Multivariate analyses of variance with main effects for size of mining industry and interaction effects for census period are carried out with 197 SLAs. The findings reveal larger populations and workforce, fewer Indigenous people and lower unemployment for mining SLAs. Mining SLAs have smaller primary and social services sectors but a bigger construction sector. Human capital is greater with more residents having tertiary qualifications and technical occupations in mining SLAs. Incomes are higher and more equitably distributed in mining than non-mining SLAs. These differences widened between 2006 to 2011 during the resource boom.

Funding

Category 1 - Australian Competitive Grants (this includes ARC, NHMRC)

History

Volume

42

Start Page

65

End Page

72

Number of Pages

8

eISSN

1873-7641

ISSN

0301-4207

Location

UK

Publisher

Elsevier

Language

en-aus

Peer Reviewed

  • Yes

Open Access

  • No

Acceptance Date

2014-10-10

External Author Affiliations

School of Business and Law (2013- ); TBA Research Institute; University of New England;

Era Eligible

  • Yes

Journal

Resources Policy