TY - RPRT AB - This Inquiry final report brings together three separate research projects to examine the capacity of Australia’s smaller cities to assist in managing population growth, including international and national migration; and provides advice on which policy instruments and programs are most likely to redirect population movements to these places. Absolute population growth was highest amongst smaller cities located in coastal regions next to the two major cities in south-east Australia. By contrast, population decline was concentrated in inland and remote towns, particularly in centres associated with resource industries. International migration was largely similar, with most relocating to larger regional urban centres; few international arrivals choose smaller cities as their first destination. The report outlines a number of potential policy direction options: -develop and activate land use planning to support the development of smaller cities -develop a portfolio of place-based policies that seek to concentrate investment in a limited number of smaller cities -encourage the growth of further education in smaller cities -expedite the growth of smaller cities as preferred places of residence for older Australians, including retirees The policy options are not mutually exclusive. Governments could potentially implement a portfolio of actions to maximise the prospects of smaller cities and associated regions. The diversity of regional cities needs to be clearly acknowledged, as does the desire for greater local input in planning. Translating this into greater localised land use planning capacity will provide the best chance of ensuring growth happens for regional cities, not just to them. AU - Beer, Andrew AU - Crommelin, Laura AU - Vij, Akshay AU - Dodson, Jago AU - Dühr, Stefanie AU - Pinnegar, Simon CY - Melbourne DO - doi: 10.18408/ahuri3226001 L1 - internal-pdf://2319250924/Âé¶¹Éç-Final-Report-386-Growing-Australias-smal.pdf PB - Australian Housing and Urban Research Institute PY - 2022 ST - Growing Australia’s smaller cities to better manage population growth T2 - Âé¶¹Éç Final Report No. 386 TI - Growing Australia’s smaller cities to better manage population growth UR - /research/final-reports/386 ID - 1137 ER -