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Liverpool City Council University of Western Sydney Australian Expert Group In Industry Studies (AEGIS) Outer Western Sydney Innovation Survey launch
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Liverpool City Council Bruce MacDonnell Acting Manager, Economic & Employment Development
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Olympic venues M7 M 5 M 4 M 2 M 5
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The Case for Liverpool The capital of South Western Sydney Strong local leadership Young and central to NSW’s fastest growing region Location: M5, M7, Metro Rail Links, Transitway Accessible to Australia’s global gateways Cost competitiveness - land, office rent, transport, labour A young skilled workforce (average age 44)
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South West Sydney Population: from 750,000 to 1 million Rapid improvements in education outcomes Concentration of advanced manufacturing Innovative employment centres A transport and logistics hub Outstanding infrastructure (soft and hard) High demand for housing and services
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Liverpool Population from 168,000 (2005) to 242,100 by 2026 (increase of 1.7%, Sydney 0.8% pa) Growing labour force (83,574) Unemployment rate of 5.0% (NSW 5.3% and Australia 5.4%) Building approvals down for the June Qtr by 40.5% (offset by increase in value of approvals) Median House Price $410,000 (above average for NSW) Median Unit Price up by 8.8% (above average)
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Industry Structure Approximately 16,000 businesses 93% can be classed as SME’s Major Industries –Construction 27% –Property and Business Services 19% –Retail 11% –Manufacturing 9% –Transport and Storage 9%
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Liverpool’s challenges Matching population growth with job growth Increasing business investment From local to metropolitan responsibilities (Metropolitan Strategy and Centres Policy) A learning community A dynamic and innovative CBD Increasing employment lands Integrated transport network
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Liverpool’s Economic Development Statement Grow existing businesses Attract new businesses and investment Improve continuous learning
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Dr. Cristina Martinez Senior Research Fellow University of Western Sydney Australian Expert Group In Industry Studies (AEGIS)
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Innovation in South West Sydney
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Thinking about innovation Innovation and economic development Knowledge-based economy Defining innovation
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Innovation is New product or service or, new organisational or managerial process or practice or, new operational process with economic value
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Proportion of businesses innovating 2001-2003 types of innovation, by employment size Source: ABS 2003 Innovation in Australian Business
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Proportion of businesses innovating by industry 2001-2003 Source: ABS 2003 Innovation in Australian Business
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South West Sydney Liverpool Campbelltown Camden Penrith Baulkham Hills Hawkesbury Blacktown Sydney CBD Wollondilly Sydney CBD
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Industrial structure Top industries (by employment) 1.Manufacturing (18.1%) 2.Retail trade (17.6%) 3.Health & Community services (11.0%) 4.Education (9.3%) 5.Property & Business services (7.5%) 6.Wholesale trade (5.3%)
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Occupational structure
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Reichian occupational breakdown
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Participation in Education Metropolitan Sydney NSW
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Educational qualifications
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Jobs growth 1991-2001 South West Sydney jobs growth 26,638 net new jobs Growth rate of 3.5% per annum Metro Sydney jobs growth rate 4.9%
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Sydney Metropolitan area Liverpool Campbelltown Camden Penrith Baulkham Hills Hawkesbury Blacktown Sydney CBD Wollondilly Income growth 1991-2001 Shown in $2002-03 Source: BTRE Taxable income database 15.5% 9.9% 16.0% 13.9% Sydney Metro area 27.9% SWS average 13.8%
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Conclusions Innovation key to economic development Non R&D factor more important in innovative activity Available proxies for understanding innovation in SWS give a mixed picture Importance of Outer Western Sydney Innovation Survey
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Survey Covers four broad areas: 1.Business demographics 2.Innovations 3.Knowledge sources and inputs 4.Collaboration and networks
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Questions
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