More growth in regions during pandemic: Australia

The population of regional Australia grew by 70,900 people during 2020-21, in contrast to a decline of 26,000 for the capital cities, according to figures released today by the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS).

ABS Director of Demography Beidar Cho said: “This is the first time since 1981 that Australia’s regional population grew more than the capital cities, due to changing migration patterns during the pandemic.”

“Regional New South Wales (up 26,800) and regional Queensland (24,100) led the way in terms of population growth over 2020-21, with regional Victoria (15,700) also increasing.”

In contrast, Melbourne declined by 60,500 people and Sydney by 5,200.

In 2020-21, the overall decrease of 26,000 reflects increases in four capital cities (Brisbane, Perth, Adelaide and Canberra) offset by declines in the other four. This is the first overall population decline for the capitals ever recorded by the ABS.

The capital city decline was due to COVID-19 related international border closures, and increased movements to the regions.

Capital cityChange 2020-21 Population 30 June 2021RegionalChange 2020-21Population 30 June 2021
Sydney-5,2005,361,500New South Wales26,8002,827,200
Melbourne-60,5005,096,300Victoria15,7001,552,800
Brisbane21,9002,582,000Queensland24,1002,639,200
Adelaide1,9001,378,400South Australia1,200395,000
Perth16,2002,141,800Western Australia1,900540,400
Hobart-330238,400Tasmania1,100302,900
Darwin-330147,000Northern Territory098,900
Canberra400431,600
All capitals -26,00017,377,000Regional Australia70,9008,361,200

Despite Sydney and Melbourne having overall population losses, the largest growth areas in the country were outer-suburban areas within these two capitals where population growth was driven by net internal migration gains.

Riverstone – Marsden Park in Sydney’s outer north-west grew by 7,400 people over 2020-21, while Cranbourne East in Melbourne’s south-east grew by 5,000.

Inner city populations declined the most over 2020-21. The largest declining area was inner Melbourne, whose population decreased by 5,900, while Sydney – Haymarket – The Rocks declined by 1,700.

State/TerritoryArea with largest increaseChange

2020-21

Population

30 June 2021

Area with largest decreaseChange

2020-21

Population

30 June 2021

New South WalesRiverstone – Marsden Park7,40048,000Sydney – Haymarket – The Rocks-1,70031,500
VictoriaCranbourne East5,00060,500Melbourne-5,90047,200
QueenslandPimpama2,80024,900St Lucia-77013,800
South AustraliaMunno Para West – Angle Vale1,10016,700Unley – Parkside-39020,700
Western AustraliaEllenbrook1,70047,700Nedlands – Dalkeith – Crawley-39019,300
TasmaniaRokeby3107,300Sandy Bay-43012,500
Northern TerritoryPalmerston – South6707,200Brinkin – Nakara-1903,200
Australian Capital TerritoryDenman Prospect7801,700Civic-2704,600
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Transcript

Grab 1

For the first time since 1981, Australia’s regional population grew more than the capital cities. The population of regional Australia grew by seventy-thousand, nine hundred people during the 2020-2021 financial year, while capital cities overall saw a decline of twenty-six-thousand people.

Grab 2

Regional New South Wales saw an increase of twenty-six-thousand, eight-hundred people, followed by regional Queensland with an increase of twenty-four-thousand, one-hundred, and regional Victoria up fifteen-thousand, seven-hundred people. In contrast, Melbourne’s population decline was sixty-thousand, five-hundred people and Sydney by five-thousand and two hundred, mostly due to reduced overseas migration with closed international borders.

Grab 3

While the populations of Brisbane, Perth, Adelaide and Canberra all increased, the decline in the remaining capital cities more than offset these gains. This led to an overall population decrease for the capitals. Interestingly, this is the first overall population decline for the capitals recorded by the ABS.

Grab 4

Inner city populations declined the most over the 2020-2021 financial year. Inner Melbourne had the largest decline, with the population decreasing by five thousand, nine hundred, while Sydney’s The Rocks area declined by one-thousand, seven hundred.

On the other hand, outer-suburban areas saw population growth, driven by net internal migration gains. Marsden Park in Sydney grew by seven-thousand, four hundred over this period and Cranbourne East in Melbourne’s south-east went up by five-thousand people.

/ABS Public Release. View in full here.