body bg

Inform-Banner

Internal migration and Australia's agricultural regions

  • Year: 2005
  • Author: Matthew Tonts
  • Journal Name: Dialogue
  • Journal Number: Vol.24, No.2
  • Country: Australia

Australia's inland agricultural areas have experienced steady population decline over the past 40 years, largely as a result of structural adjustment in agriculture, policy reform, service and infrastructure rationalisation, and diminishing employment opportunities. This article provides an overview of the patterns and processes of migration affecting two inland agricultural regions, the Wimmera-Mallee in Victoria, and the Wheatbelt in Western Australia (WA). These regions are typical of extensive inland agricultural regions across Australia. The article examines the general economic, social and political trends in these regions and how they have shaped the patterns of migration. It is argued that the main factors driving out-migration include economic adjustments in the agricultural sector, technological change and social preferences. Governments and communities have pursued a range of strategies to reverse, or at least slow, out-migration from agricultural regions.

Related Items

Trajectories of Change: How Regional Communities Adapt to the Closure of a Major Industry

Primary industries such as forestry and dairy have responded to economic change over the past four...

Evolutionary Perspectives on Rural Australia

An enduring concern within Australian rural geography has been to understand the nature and...

Skilled Labour Migration Flows to Australia's Northern Territory 2001-2006: Beyond Periphery?

This research describes the Australian domestic skilled labour migration system as recorded at the...

Share this with your friends

Footer Logo

Contact Us

Level 2, 53 Blackall Street
Barton ACT 2600
AUSTRALIA
Telephone: 02 6260 3733
or email us