Australia’s regional towns have been dealt some savage economic blows in recent years, but a new project announced today could provide some answers to longstanding economic and social challenges in the regions.
Led by University of South Australia (UniSA) economic geographer , and supported by UniSA industrial sociologist , the three-year project will focus on the impact of recent major industry losses in regional areas – including power stations, steel, automotive and manufacturing – with a view to developing new strategies to mitigate the fallout.
The UniSA researchers will use a $247,058 (ARC) grant to examine the impact of major plant closures on affected businesses in the supply chain and other local firms and propose new strategies, including creative forms of government assistance, to bring inclusive growth to regional areas.
“In recent years, many regional areas have already been hit hard by industrial closures and many regional areas are vulnerable to the effects of futures closures,” Assoc Prof Weller says.
These locations included in this qualitative comparative study will include the industrial towns of Port Augusta, the Latrobe Valley, the Upper Hunter and Lithgow, where coal-fired power stations have closed or have announced closure plans; Port Adelaide and Geelong, both of which have been affected by automotive industry closures; Portland, Gladstone and Townsville, where smelters are vulnerable; and the steel towns of Whyalla and Port Kembla.
“Most previous research on vulnerable places after place closures has focused on labour market adjustment. This project will take it a step further, looking at the extent to which firms are able to adjust to changed circumstances.”
The pattern of new businesses starting up and then shutting down in regional areas after plant closures will be analysed to help identify what can be done differently.
“Since the 1980s, Australia’s economy has become more spatially uneven as many regional areas have been left behind while the core cities grow rapidly. While both state and federal governments have committed to boosting populations in rural and regional Australia, the question of how to provide quality jobs beyond the core cities remains unanswered.”
The project will collect data from 10-15 towns that have suffered plant closures in recent years to identify what happened to dependent firms after the industry collapse.
“We hope to come up with some new ideas about how to support these troubled regions to create sustainable employment into the future,” Assoc Prof Weller says.