Economic Resilience in Australia Huong Dinh, Ben Freyens, Anne Daly, - - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Economic Resilience in Australia Huong Dinh, Ben Freyens, Anne Daly, - - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Recent Trends in Community Economic Resilience in Australia Huong Dinh, Ben Freyens, Anne Daly, Yogi Vidyattama 22 June 2015 Background Major shocks during 2006-2011 The Millennium Drought The Global Financial Crisis The Mining


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Recent Trends in Community Economic Resilience in Australia

Huong Dinh, Ben Freyens, Anne Daly, Yogi Vidyattama 22 June 2015

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Background

  • Major shocks during 2006-2011

– The Millennium Drought – The Global Financial Crisis – The Mining Boom

  • A need to build or reinforce the resilience of local communities

– Counteract negative impacts – Adapt to changed conditions

  • A rising call for measuring resilience capacity at community level

– Identify communities of concern with low or declining levels of resilience – Assist policy makers to develop supportive strategies

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Research Questions

  • What are the patterns of change in community

economic resilience (CER) and its components across states, regions and over time?

  • How do the components of CER interact?
  • Is there a long-term association between CER and

household income?

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CER constructs, data and variables

Human capital % people aged 15 and over with a university degree or other tertiary qualification % people aged 15 and over with an advanced diploma or diploma qualification % employed people classified as professionals % employed people who work at Skill Level 1 Social capital % population with internet use % population participating in voluntary work % population with English proficiency Natural capital % employed people working in agricultural and mining industries % population with a broadband connection % households with a four or more-bedroom private dwelling proportion of households with at least three motor vehicles % households with a high mortgage repayment % households with a high rent payment Physical capital Financial capital Diversity Accessibility % population in the national 9th or 10th income deciles % of adult population in the labour force Household affordability ratio (the fraction of household income over rental payment) Comparing the community-level sector-specific employment rate with the national rate Remoteness and accessibility in terms of access along the road network from populated localities to each the five categories of Service Centres CER Census ARIA

Spatial unit: SA Level 1

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Data exclusion

– Exclude SA1 with any of those characteristics:

  • population is less than 10;
  • any selected denominator variables are less

than six

  • more than 80% of its population live in non-

private dwellings.

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Index computation

– Principal component analysis:

  • turns a large number of highly correlated variables into a smaller

set of independently transformed variables

– Indexes range from 0 (low resilience) to 100 (high resilience) – Working data: Indexes computed for 47,490 SA1s in 2006 and 44,889 SA1s in 2011 out of a grand total of 54,805.

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Fixed Effect Estimation

  • Adjusting for SA1-specific/state-specific (𝑏𝑗/𝜄

𝑘) effects

  • Testing if the indexes (𝑍

𝑗𝑢) change over time ( 2011 vs 2006):

𝑍

𝑗𝑢 = 𝑏𝑗+∝𝑢 𝑢 + 𝜁𝑗𝑢

  • Testing the association between capital-related indexes (𝐷𝑗𝑢) and diversity

and accessibility indexes (𝑌𝑗𝑢): 𝐷𝑗𝑢 = 𝑏𝑗+∝𝑢 𝑢 + 𝛾𝑌𝑗𝑢 + 𝜁𝑗𝑢

  • Testing the association between household income (𝐽𝑗𝑢) and CER index

(𝐷𝑗,𝑢−1): 𝑚𝑝𝑕𝐽𝑗𝑢 = 𝛿 + 𝜄

𝑘𝑇 𝑘 + 𝜀𝑚𝑝𝑕𝐽𝑗,𝑢−1 + 𝜍𝐷𝐹𝑆𝑗,𝑢−1 + 𝜏𝑗𝑢

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Human Capital Index

20 40 60 2006 2011

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Social capital index

55 60 65 70 2006 2011

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Natural Capital Index

5 10 15 2006 2011

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Physical Capital Index

20 40 60 80 2006 2011

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Financial Capital Index

35 40 45 2006 2011

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Diversity Index

50 100 2006 2011

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Accessibility Index

50 100 150 2006 2011

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CER Index

40 45 50 55 2006 2011

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CER Capital-Related Constructs by Level of Diversity

Level of diversity Mean difference test Low High Mean SE Mean SE Mean diff. SE p-value Human 31.2 0.08 31.4 0.06 0.23 0.05 <0.001 Social 62.0 0.03 62.3 0.02 0.27 0.05 <0.001 Natural 5.2 0.02 4.5 0.01

  • 0.64

0.03 <0.001 Physical 38.4 0.06 40.0 0.03 1.58 0.08 <0.001 Financial 39.5 0.02 39.8 0.01 0.33 0.02 <0.001

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CER Capital-Related Constructs by Level of Accessibility

Level of accessibility Mean difference test Low High Mean SE Mean SE Mean diff. SE p-value Human 25.4 0.12 33.4 0.08 8.0 0.15 <0.001 Social 65.8 0.06 61.0 0.04

  • 4.7

0.07 <0.001 Natural 5.3 0.12 4.6 0.04

  • 0.7

0.17 <0.001 Physical 31.4 0.12 42.4 0.09 11.0 0.15 <0.001 Financial 39.5 0.03 39.8 0.01 0.4 0.03 <0.001

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Association Between Household Income and CER

Log of household income Coef. SE t P>|t| Lagged CER 0.04 0.0003 159.50 0.000 Lagged log of household income 0.08 0.0021 41.00 0.000 State (omitted) Cons

  • 1.87

0.0152

  • 122.95

0.000 R squared 0.55 Number of observations 46012

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Conclusions

  • There was a statistically significant improvement in the
  • verall CER index in all states and regions.

– CER improved over time in human, social and physical capital terms, declined in diversity terms. – Natural index improved in all regions and states except ACT and VIC. – Financial index declined in all regions and states except ACT. – Accessibility index improved in most states except VIC and TAS (unchanged) and the MDB (reduced)

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Conclusions (cont.)

  • Communities with a higher level of economic diversity had

higher human, social, physical and financial capitals but lower natural capital,

  • Communities with a lower level of accessibility reported

lower levels of human, physical and financial capital but higher levels of social and natural capital.

  • CER has a long-term positive impact on household income