SUMMARY
New South Wales has been experiencing a massive re-organisation of production,
from the period of Britain’s entry into the European Economic Community
(1973) and throughout the subsequent global slumps of 1973-1974, 1980-1981 and
1990-1992. Agriculture (which contributed significantly to the state’s
exports), and manufacturing (which produced relatively large quantities of
goods for the local market), have both diminished. Services, by the
21
st century, have become the dominant area of production: both in
terms of activity on a domestic level and in the area of exports (pp.28,41-42)
Property and business services have expanded to the point where the majority of
the nation’s leading property fund managers, and the majority of the
nation’s listed property trusts, are located in Sydney. Property and
business services is (equally) the largest area of full-time commercial
employment in the state (pp.1-5)
Sydney now effectively occupies the position of financial capital of Australia.
Not only are two out of the four major banks in Sydney, but the majority of the
nation’s leading funds managers, and the majority of commercial providers
of superannuation, are based in Sydney (pp.5-8)
Building remains relatively resilient, despite the slowdown following the 2000
Olympics and the rise and fall of the boom in residential housing (in the
opening years of the twenty-first century). Not only are the headquarters of
some of the nation’s major building firms based in Sydney, but the state
is host to over 100,000 large and small house builders. Building is the third
largest area of employment in NSW (pp.8-12)
Health is a sector which remains equally resilient, partly due to the expansion
of the number of private health operations in the state, a development, in
turn, stimulated by the Howard government’s changes to health insurance,
introduced in the late 1990s. Health is the fifth largest area of employment in
the state (pp.13-14)
Retailing has developed as the fourth largest employer in NSW. This has
occurred partly through the massive expansion of the Woolworths and Coles
chains. While Coles (the smaller of the two chains) is based in Melbourne,
Woolworths (the larger) is based in Sydney. Retailing boosts the activity of
the property sector, as supermarkets (owned by either Woolworths or Coles) are
often anchor tenants in the many shopping malls built throughout the nation
(pp.14-19)
Transport and storage is another sector which continues to expand, if only
slowly. A defining characteristic of the sector is the high number of light
commercial vehicles. Around 80% of vehicles, in the transport and storage
sector, are light commercial vehicles. LCVs, equally, are the fastest growing
vehicle type in the sector. Sydney hosts the headquarters of the nation’s
largest concern in the transport area: Qantas (pp.18-19)
Wholesaling has expanded as the imbalance of the state’s imports, over
exports, has increased to the point where NSW now imports almost twice as much
as it exports (in dollar terms). This is partly due not only to a decline in
Australia’s manufactured exports, but to a substantial increase in
imports of passenger motor vehicles. A large amount of the sophisticated
machinery, that the state needs to produce goods, is now imported from
overseas. Understandably Sydney now hosts the headquarters of many of the
nation’s major wholesaling concerns (pp.20-26)
Education has expanded considerably as the sector has become a major exporter
of services. Whereas, in 1989, international students were only 10% of all
students at Australian universities, by the opening years of the
21
st century the number of overseas students had reached a level of
25% of the student total. NSW, out of all the states and territories, earns the
most from exports of education services (pp.26-28)
Manufacturing, during the last decades of the twentieth century, has slumped
sharply in terms of its contribution to the state’s gross state product
(GSP). In 1981 it contributed 21% to GSP, whereas in 2006 its contribution had
dropped to 11%. A substantial part of this decline has occurred through the
decisions of multinational concerns to reduce their operations in NSW (these
decisions, in turn, an outcome of the 1973-1974, 1980-1982 and 1990-1992 global
recessions). Manufacturing, nevertheless, remains an important area of
employment in the state (pp.28-32)
Tourism, which many expected (along with education) would become a substantial
export earning area of the services sector, has however declined in recent
years. This is not only as a result of the reduced capacity of many Australians
to holiday (domestically) as they used to, but also to a sudden recent drop in
the number Japanese tourists visiting Australia (pp.32-35)
Communications services forms a small component of gross state product. While
the contribution of the sector has consistently been small, it has become even
smaller in the last two or three years (pp.36-37)
Mining, as a contributor to GSP, has declined since the 1920s (when, of all the
coal produced in Australia, 80% was mined in NSW). Nonetheless mining still
contributes significantly to the state’s export revenue (pp.38-42)
Agriculture contributes even less to GSP than mining (although, in the 1950s,
it contributed nearly 30% of Australia’s gross domestic product).
Nevertheless agriculture, like mining, still makes a significant contribution
to the state’s export revenue (pp.42-43)