Australia
relies mostly on net overseas migration to sustain its rate of population
growth. Our population grew by 1.6% in the year to March 2018, or by around
380,000 people. Of this, natural population growth contributed over a third
(144,000) while overseas migration contributed the rest (237,000 people).
So what
would happen if growing community opposition to population growth – and in
particular high rates of overseas migration – meant a slowdown in our
population growth rate? The pressure is growing for just such a change in
policy, and many in industry fear the worst for Australia – especially property
– should our growth rates slow.
To try
understand what this might mean, I’ve taken a look at some low population growth
countries and also at high growth countries. The data sources aren’t consistent
from one measure to the next nor are the time periods the same for each country
due to differences in reporting times (and data availability) but the results
are pretty confronting nonetheless.
First, some
countries with low rates or negative rates of population growth are listed
below. Australia is there for comparison purposes only – our rate of population
growth easily eclipses this group.
Is there an
obvious correlation between population growth and the economy and housing? The
answer it seems is no. Japan’s population is shrinking, but its GDP per capita
is healthy and on a par with the UK and NZ and certainly among the wealthier of
nations by this measure. Its housing, relative to incomes, is on average
cheaper than the Australian average (for all major markets… Sydney and
Melbourne are of course in a league of their own) and Japan is experiencing housing
price growth of around 1.46% - even with a shrinking population.
Denmark
also has a very low rate of population growth but a high GDP per capita and
modest housing price growth. The Asian tiger economies like Taiwan and Hong
Kong have negligible population growth rates but high GDP per capita and
in HK’s case, outrageously expensive housing which has been rapidly rising in
price.
Canada and
New Zealand have rates of population growth that are roughly half ours while
their GDP per capita is high by global standards. They also have expensive
housing markets and high rates of price growth. (Australia’s high GDP per
capital reflects our high value resources exports with a relatively small
population, leading many to argue that a growing population only dilutes our
prosperity given resource sector exports are not related to population).
Here is the
table showing a selection of low population growth countries compared with
Australia:
Country
|
POP GROWTH RATE
|
GDP PER CAPITA (IMF data)
|
Housing median
multiple (Demographia, major markets 2018)
|
House price growth
(IMF Global Housing Watch, latest for each country)
|
Japan
|
-0.21%
|
$38,440
|
4.2
|
1.46%
|
Russia
|
-0.08%
|
$10,608
|
na
|
-5.45%
|
Taiwan
|
0.17%
|
$24,577
|
na
|
0.69%
|
Denmark
|
0.22%
|
$56,444
|
na
|
3%
|
Hong Kong
|
0.32%
|
$46,109
|
19.4
|
11.80%
|
China
|
0.41%
|
$8,643
|
na
|
3.18%
|
United Kingdom
|
0.52%
|
$39,735
|
4.6
|
1.94%
|
Switzerland
|
0.69%
|
$80,591
|
na
|
-0.86%
|
Canada
|
0.73%
|
$45,077
|
4.3
|
5.53%
|
New Zealand
|
0.79%
|
$41,593
|
8.8
|
4.78%
|
Australia
|
1.60%
|
$55,707
|
6.6
|
3.02%
|
So economic
prosperity and housing markets are not, on this sample at least, connected to
high rates of population growth. There are nations very similar to ours with
much lower rates of population growth but which are equally prosperous and with
equally healthy (or too healthy?) housing markets.
What about
nations with higher rates of population growth than Australia? Again, the list
is not convincing. Without even looking into their housing markets or economic
measures, the list of nations with higher rates of population growth than ours gives
little comfort to any link between high rates of population growth and economic
prosperity.
I’ll leave
you to peruse the list below (which lists all countries with population growth
above our 1.6% per annum) and choose where you’d rather live.
In the meantime,
where does this leave us? Do we still need “a big Australia?” and is high
growth essential to our prosperity? Personally, I have always believed we need
a larger population to give us a critical economic mass across a range of
measures and for many different reasons. Equally though, it seems odd in a
country so large as Australia to concentrate nearly all growth in mostly two
cities and ask them to bear the infrastructure burden to cope with that growth
while other regions perfectly capable of absorbing growth with less stress are
overlooked.
It’s going
to be an interesting and ongoing debate and opinions will not be in short
supply. Pro-growth and anti-growth proponents will dig their trenches and wage
their wars. The evidence (also known as truth) is - as the saying goes - the
first casualty in war and this will probably be no different. But hopefully a
quick look at the evidence might leave some of us better informed. Balanced arguments,
while possibly overlooked in the short term, may just find an eventual foothold in public policy
debate about a very important topic.
Now here’s
that list of countries growing faster than Australia, in descending order:
1
|
South Sudan
|
3.83
|
2
|
Angola
|
3.52
|
3
|
Malawi
|
3.31
|
4
|
Burundi
|
3.25
|
5
|
Uganda
|
3.2
|
6
|
Niger
|
3.19
|
7
|
Mali
|
3.02
|
8
|
Burkina Faso
|
3
|
9
|
Zambia
|
2.93
|
10
|
Ethiopia
|
2.85
|
11
|
Tanzania
|
2.75
|
12
|
Benin
|
2.71
|
13
|
Western Sahara
|
2.7
|
14
|
Togo
|
2.64
|
15
|
Guinea
|
2.61
|
16
|
Cameroon
|
2.56
|
17
|
Iraq
|
2.55
|
18
|
Liberia
|
2.5
|
19
|
Madagascar
|
2.5
|
20
|
Mozambique
|
2.46
|
21
|
Rwanda
|
2.45
|
22
|
Egypt
|
2.45
|
23
|
Equatorial Guinea
|
2.44
|
24
|
Nigeria
|
2.43
|
25
|
Senegal
|
2.39
|
26
|
Sierra Leone
|
2.38
|
27
|
United Arab Emirates
|
2.37
|
28
|
Congo, Democratic Republic of the
|
2.37
|
29
|
Afghanistan
|
2.36
|
30
|
East Timor
|
2.36
|
31
|
Gaza Strip
|
2.33
|
32
|
Yemen
|
2.28
|
33
|
Qatar
|
2.27
|
34
|
Bahrain
|
2.26
|
35
|
British Virgin Islands
|
2.25
|
36
|
Mauritania
|
2.17
|
37
|
Ghana
|
2.17
|
38
|
Djibouti
|
2.16
|
39
|
Turks and Caicos Islands
|
2.16
|
40
|
Central African Republic
|
2.12
|
41
|
Congo, Republic of the
|
2.11
|
42
|
Gambia, The
|
2.05
|
43
|
Jordan
|
2.05
|
44
|
Oman
|
2.03
|
45
|
Cayman Islands
|
2.01
|
46
|
Somalia
|
2
|
47
|
Luxembourg
|
1.98
|
48
|
Anguilla
|
1.97
|
49
|
Namibia
|
1.95
|
50
|
Solomon Islands
|
1.94
|
51
|
Gabon
|
1.92
|
52
|
Chad
|
1.86
|
53
|
Guinea-Bissau
|
1.86
|
54
|
Vanuatu
|
1.85
|
55
|
West Bank
|
1.84
|
56
|
Cote d'Ivoire
|
1.84
|
57
|
Singapore
|
1.82
|
58
|
Belize
|
1.8
|
59
|
Guatemala
|
1.75
|
60
|
Sao Tome and Principe
|
1.72
|
61
|
Papua New Guinea
|
1.71
|
62
|
Algeria
|
1.7
|
63
|
Kenya
|
1.69
|
64
|
Comoros
|
1.64
|
65
|
Sudan
|
1.64
|
66
|
Tajikistan
|
1.62
|
67
|
Honduras
|
1.6
|
Great Article Ross. I wonder if we should also look at alternative uses for the excess capital used in house production, remembering that a house usually gets built only once. The rate of housing stock growth must eventually plateau and can we get better productivity from freeing up the labour market and encouraging business start-ups. Need to reduce red tape which will upset the bureaucrats !
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Nice article, Ross. Just looking at the list of countries with higher growth than Australia ... looks like a who's who of economic aide recipients ? I'd imagine that an analysis of the underlying dependency factors of each economy would need to be examined to get a real picture of the why's and wherefore's.
ReplyDeleteCertainly not a list of countries I'd want to live in. Except maybe Vanuatu. For 4 months of the year.
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