ImmigrationImmigration and the Aussie resources boom

Published 19 July 2011

Australian businesses claim that unless overseas migration into Australia is kept at 180,000 people a year or higher, there will not be enough skilled workers to meet employer requirements and to sustain the country’s aggregate economic growth; a new study challenges many of the assumptions reinforcing the arguments for continued high levels of immigration, and shows that Australia’s economic growth can be maintained with overseas migration at 90,000 people a year

New research from Monash University has found that Australia’s population circumstances demand an immigration program which addresses problems of sustainability, particularly as they affect the quality of urban life in the big cities.

Dr. Bob Birrell from the Center for Population and Urban research at Monash and co-author of the research paper Immigration and the Resources Boom Mark 2, said that population growth is not compatible with resolving sustainability problems.

“The Labor Government’s current immigration target of 180,000 people per year means that Australia’s population will grow from approximately 22 million to 36 million or more by 2050. “Industry is claiming that, unless overseas migration is kept at 180,000 people or higher, there will not be enough skilled workers to meet employer requirements and to sustain aggregate economic growth,” said Dr. Birrell.

A Monash University release reports that the report challenged many of the assumptions reinforcing the arguments for continued high levels of immigration. It showed that with overseas migration at 90,000 people a year, and labor force participation rates unchanged, the workforce will expand by one million people between 2011 and 2021.

“We found that if these participation rates increase, as they have over the past decade, workforce growth will be nearer to 1.7 million people over this period. “Australia needs a lower, but better-targeted immigration program. The bulk of current migration has little to do with providing scarce skills to the resource industries,” said Birrell.

The research findings showed that current migration is delivering two major streams: a predominantly professional flow to the big cities where immigrants are being employed in people-servicing industries such as health and welfare; and a mass of people on temporary visas such as students and working holidaymakers.

“As is now widely recognized, the resources boom will lead to the contraction of some metropolitan-based industries, mainly because of the appreciation of the Australian dollar. In this context, it makes little sense to pursue a high immigration policy which promotes rapid metropolitan population growth,” said Birrell.

The report has been co-authored by Bob Birrell, Ernest Healy, Research Fellow with the Center for Population and Urban Research, Katharine Betts, Associate Professor of Sociology at Swinburne University of Technology and Fred T. Smith, Professorial Fellow with the Center for Population and Urban Research.