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Page 1: BENCHMARK REPORT 2021 - auschamcambodia.com

BENCHMARK REPORT 2021

Discover why Australia is a great investment destination

Image credit: MEzairi/Shutterstock.com

Page 2: BENCHMARK REPORT 2021 - auschamcambodia.com

Why Australia 3

1. Resilient economy 4

2. Dynamic industries 14

3. Innovation and skills 27

4. Global ties 40

5. Strong foundations 49

CONTENTS

Why Australia Benchmark Report 2021 2

Page 3: BENCHMARK REPORT 2021 - auschamcambodia.com

Like other nations, Australia spent 2020 dealing

with the economic and health impacts of the

COVID-19 pandemic. Our decisive actions minimised

the spread of the virus in the community, and

numerous economic stimulus packages sustained

businesses and households throughout the year.

These proactive measures mean the Australian

economy is bouncing back quickly. Resources,

energy and agriculture exports continued to grow

throughout the pandemic.

Our resilient, services-based economy is adapting to

changes in global trade as we look to new markets

and sectors to boost our growth. Strong trading

relationships with the world’s major markets will help

us expand our global presence.

Perhaps our greatest asset is our creative,

resourceful and enterprising people. As one of the

most multicultural and multilingual countries in the

world, we use our global ties to connect with the

best the world has to offer.

Australia welcomes productive foreign investment,

whether you’re a multinational giant, ambitious

startup or research organisation with innovative

ideas. In return, we offer a safe, stable location to

invest and do business, with smart people, solid

governance, strong global connections and a

lifestyle that’s the envy of the world.

WHY AUSTRALIA

Australia: Primed for investment and trade

Why Australia Benchmark Report 2021 3

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01 RESILIENT ECONOMY

The world’s 12th largest economy 6

Resilience in the face of adversity 7

A balanced response to COVID-19 8

High levels of COVID-19 support 9

Low government debt by global standards 10

Proximity to Asia’s powerhouse economies 11

A diversified, services-based economy 12

Service industries power ahead 13

Why Australia Benchmark Report 2021 4

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01 RESILIENT ECONOMY

A resilient economy that

outperforms in global

rankings

The Australian economy put in an

exceptional performance in 2019–20,

despite huge challenges. Even before the

COVID-19 pandemic arrived, the economy

hit major headwinds. A major drought was

followed by bushfires. Global lockdowns

then shut borders and dislocated trade.

Our diverse economy has kept us strong.

Australia’s resources, energy and

agriculture exports kept growing. A fiscal

stimulus equivalent to 18% of GDP helped

sustain households and businesses. And an

effective public health response stemmed

community transmission.

Decisive action helped the Australian

economy to outperform, according to global

comparisons. Australian GDP was 2.4%

lower in 2020 than in 2019. This decline

was far smaller than the average across

advanced economies.

In financial terms, Australia remains rock-

solid. The Australian public sector debt ratio

will be just 49% of GDP by the end of 2021.

On current forecasts, this will be one of the

lowest among developed economies.

Why Australia Benchmark Report 2021 5

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World’s largest economies, 2021

Percentage share of total world nominal GDP in US$

Notes: 1. Rest of the world’s 195 economies: US$17,616 billion in 2021 or 19%

of the global GDP. 2. Top 20 largest economies: US$73,415 billion or 81% of

world’s GDP in 2021.

Sources: International Monetary Fund, 2020, World Economic Outlook

Database, October 2020; Austrade

The world’s 12th largest economy

The Australian economy is set to become the

world’s 12th largest economy in 2021, up two

places from 2019, according to the International

Monetary Fund. Australia’s GDP will be around

A$2 trillion (US$1.5 trillion). Australia is home

to just 0.3% of the world’s population, but

accounts for 1.6% of the global economy.

4. Germany 4.7%

2. China 18.1%

12. Australia 1.6%

7. India 3.1%

8. Italy 2.3%

5. France 3.2%

13. Spain 1.6%

6. UK 3.1%

17. Netherlands 1.1% 3. Japan 5.6%

11. Russia 1.7%1. US 24.1%

9. Canada 1.9%

18. Switzerland 0.9%

14. Brazil 1.6%

16. Mexico 1.2%

10. Korea 1.8%

20. Taiwan 0.7%19. Saudi Arabia 0.8%

ASEAN–10 3.7%

(incl 15. Indonesia 1.3%)

Why Australia Benchmark Report 2021 6

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Notes: 1. Gross domestic product (GDP) is national currency, chained volume

estimates, national reference year. 2. When GDP growth wasn’t available, IMF’s

estimates were used. Those regions are: Argentina; Brazil; Chile; New Zealand;

Russia; Saudi Arabia; Singapore; South Africa; and advanced economies.

Sources: Trading Economics, 2021, Gross domestic product, constant prices;

Australian Bureau of Statistics,2021, Australian National Accounts: National

Income, Expenditure and Product, December 2020; International Monetary

Fund, 2021, World Economic Outlook January 2021; Focus economics, 2021,

GDP in Finland; Austrade

Real GDP change1, selected economies

Percentage change 2020 on 2019

Resilience in the face of adversity

The start of 2020 brought huge challenges

for Australia. The country was just recovering

from devastating bushfires when the COVID-19

outbreak began. The Government acted quickly

to close borders and contain the pandemic. The

Australian health system coped with infections

and the government supported businesses

and the livelihoods of Australian workers.

The result was that Australia was less hard hit

economically than other countries. Australian

GDP was 2.4% lower in 2020 than in 2019. This

decline was far smaller than the average across

advanced economies.

-12

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Singapore

Chile

Portugal

Colo

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India

Italy

Mexic

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Spain

UK

Arg

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France

2.3

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–2.9–2.4

–3.0

–3.5 –3.6–3.8 –3.9

–4.5

–4.9–5.3 –5.4 –5.4

–6.0 –6.1

–6.8–7.1

–7.4 –7.5

–8.2–8.5

–8.7

–9.9 –10.0–10.4

Advanced economies = –4.9%

Why Australia Benchmark Report 2021 7

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Notes: 1. Fatality rates as at 1 March 2021. 2. When country GDP growth

wasn’t available, IMF’s estimates were used. Those economies are: Argentina;

Brazil; Chile; New Zealand; Russia; Saudi Arabia; Singapore; and South Africa.

Sources: WorldoMeter, 2021, COVID-19 Coronavirus Pandemic; Trading

Economics, 2021, Gross domestic product, constant prices; Australian

Bureau of Statistics, 2021, Australian National Accounts: National Income,

Expenditure and Product, December 2020; International Monetary Fund,

2021, World Economic Outlook January 2021; Focus economics, 2021, GDP in

Finland; Austrade

COVID-19 fatality rates1 and change in gross domestic productA balanced response to COVID-19

In 2020, all countries tried to minimise economic

disruption while slowing the spread of COVID-19.

Few countries achieved both. Australia’s

geographical isolation helped us prevent

uncontrolled transmission, while the states and

territories closed internal borders in response

to local outbreaks. To support our economy,

the government provided an economic package

worth 18% of GDP. The Australian public

generally adhered to stringent, fast-changing

lockdown measures. Bloomberg recently rated

Australia as the second best country in the

world in its COVID Resilience Ranking. By the

end of February 2021, Australia combined a low

fatality rate with a low impact on GDP, relative

to most other countries.

2,000

1,800

1,600

1,400

1,200

1,000

800

600

400

200

0

Percentage change in GDP, 2020 vs 2019

India

Portugal

Italy

Brazil

Sweden

US

Russia

Finland

Japan Australia

ChinaKorea

Chile

Colombia

France

MexicoSpain

UK

Fa

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lio

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s

BE

TT

ER

BETTER

Philippines

-12 -11 -10 -9 -8 -7 -6 -5 -4 -3 -2 -1 0 1 2 3 4

Average of selected economies = –5.7%

Singapore

World average = 326

Netherlands

Canada

GermanySouth Africa

Argentina

Saudi ArabiaMalaysia

New ZealandThailand

Why Australia Benchmark Report 2021 8

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Notes: 1. Includes Health and non-health sectors. 2. Liquidity support is

defined as “Below-the-line” measures plus Contingent liabilities. “Below-the-line”

measures involve the creation of assets or liabilities without affecting today’s

fiscal balance, like an equity injection in a firm. Contingent liabilities are not

explicitly recorded on government balance sheets and arise only in the event

of a particular discrete situation, such as a crisis. For example, in the case of

Australia, the Coronavirus SME Guarantee Scheme.

Sources: International Monetary Fund, 2021, Fiscal Monitor Update; Austrade

Fiscal measures in response to the COVID-19 pandemic for selected economies

As a percentage of gross domestic product1

High levels of COVID-19 support

After Australia closed its borders, the

Australian Government created an economic

stimulus package worth 18% of GDP. In global

terms, this placed Australia between the US

and the EU. Support was provided to workers,

businesses and the broader community.

It kept Australians employed and companies

in business.

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

Liquidity support2

Additional spending or foregone revenues

Ge

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Global average = 13.5%

44.0

42.3

38.9

32.4

23.5

21.821.0

19.2 18.7

14.513.6

18.0

12.8 12.5 12.4

10.69.5

7.9

6.0

4.43.53.5

2.52.0

1.0

Why Australia Benchmark Report 2021 9

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Jap

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US

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2019

Expected increase to 2021

179

146

124

110107 106

104102

8077

74

62

57 5654 54

50 49 48

40 39

3128

2422

11

General government net debt, 2019 to 2021

As a percentage of GDP

Notes: 1. For cross-economy comparability, net debt levels reported by national

statistical agencies for economies that have adopted the 2008 System of

National Accounts (Australia, Canada, US) are adjusted to exclude unfunded

pension liabilities of government employees’ defined-benefit pension plans.

2. Belgium’s net debt series has been revised to ensure consistency between

liabilities and assets. Net debt is defined as gross debt (Maastricht definition)

minus assets in the form of currency and deposits, loans, and debt securities.

3. “Net debt” for Ireland is defined as gross general debt minus debt instrument

assets, namely, currency and deposits, debt securities, and loans. It was

previously defined as general government debt less currency and deposits.

4. The IMF considers the following markets as part of the ‘advanced economies’

group: Australia, Austria, Belgium, Canada, Cyprus, the Czech Republic, Denmark,

Estonia, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Hong Kong SAR, Iceland, Ireland,

Israel, Italy, Japan, Korea, Latvia, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Macao SAR, Malta,

Netherlands, New Zealand, Norway, Portugal, Puerto Rico, San Marino, Singapore,

Slovak Republic, Slovenia, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, Taiwan, United Kingdom,

and United States.

Sources: International Monetary Fund, 2020, Fiscal Monitor; Austrade

Low government debt by global standards

The COVID-19 pandemic has triggered a rapid

increase in public debt in almost all economies.

Australia entered 2020 with very low public

debt and Australia’s debt burden will remain low

by global standards. In its October 2020 ‘Fiscal

Monitor’ report, the International Monetary Fund

estimated that the Australian Government’s net

debt would be 49% of GDP in 2021. This is well

below the 96% average forecast for advanced

economies.4

2019 2021 Change, %

Advanced economies average 77 96 20

Euro Area 69 85 16

G20 Advanced 83 105 21

G7 88 110 22

Emerging market & middle-income economies average 39 52 13

Asia (gross debt only; net debt figures unavailable) 54 68 14

Europe 30 43 13

G20 Emerging 38 NA NA

Why Australia Benchmark Report 2021 10

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Notes: 1. The bar represents the value of the regional gross domestic

product at current prices based on purchasing power parity. 2. To avoid

double counting with NIEs and ASEAN, Singapore was excluded. 3. Newly

Industrialised Economies (NIEs): Singapore, Hong Kong SAR, Korea and Taiwan.

4. World Economic Forum, see source below.

F = Forecast

Sources: International Monetary Fund, 2020, World Economic Outlook

Database; World Economic Forum, 2019, In 2020 Asia will have the world’s

largest GDP; Austrade

Asian economic growth

GDP based on purchasing power parity (PPP)1

Proximity to Asia’s powerhouse economies

Asia’s share of global GDP has increased

steadily from 20% in 1980 to over 40% in 2025.

Australian trade stands to benefit. Most of

Australia’s principal export partners are located

in Northeast Asia and Southeast Asia, and a

network of 15 free trade agreements gives

Australian companies preferential access to

these fast-growing markets. A huge middle

class is emerging in Asia, with 2.4 billion

consumers expected by 2030.4

Countries & regions

Compound annual growth rate (%) 1980–2025

China and India 10.0

Japan, Australia and New Zealand 4.3

ASEAN-92 7.5

Newly Industrialised Economies3 7.7

Other developing Asia 7.8

Average of Asia incl. Australia and New Zealand 7.8

World average 5.9

1980 1985 1990 1995 2000 2010 20152005 2020F 2025F

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’s G

DP

Asia plus Australia and New Zealand as a percentage of world’s GDP (right-hand axis)

0

10

20

30

40

50

60

70

80

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

20%

44%

Why Australia Benchmark Report 2021 11

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Australia’s real gross value added (GVA) by industry

Total as a percentage of total industry, 2020

A diversified, services-based economy

Australia’s resilience is underpinned by a

diverse mix of competitive industries. In 2020,

the country’s services and goods industries

accounted for 81% and 19% of real gross value

added (GVA) respectively. Australia’s mining

sector generated 11.0% of GVA, followed by

financial services (9.4%), ownership of dwellings

(9.1%) and healthcare and social assistance

(8.0%). Technology-driven sectors – including

professional, scientific and technical services,

education and IT – are worth over 15% of total

economic production.

Notes: 1. Goods comprise agriculture, forestry and fishing, manufacturing

and mining. 2. Ownership of dwellings is not classified as a good or service.

3. GVA is around 95% of total GDP in 2020. To obtain the GDP, we would need

to add taxes, the statistical discrepancy less subsidies to the GVA.

Sources: Australian Bureau of Statistics, 2021, Australian National Accounts:

National Income, Expenditure and Product, Table 6; Austrade

Public administration and safety 6.1%

Education and training 5.2%

Transport, postal and warehousing 4.2%

Administrative and support services 3.2%

Rental, hiring and real estate services 2.9%

Electricity, gas, water and waste services 2.6%

Accommodation and food services 2.0%

Information media and telecommunications 2.4%

Ownership of dwellings2 9.1%

Other services 2.5%

Wholesale trade 4.0%

Retail trade 4.5%

Mining1 11.0%

Manufacturing1 5.9%

Agriculture, forestry and fishing1 2.1%

Financial and insurance services 9.4%

Construction 7.4%

Healthcare and social assistance 8.0%

Professional, scientific and

technical services 7.6%

Total GVA3 = A$1,808 billion

Why Australia Benchmark Report 2021 12

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0 1 2 3 4 5 6

Information media and telecommunications

Professional, scienti�c and technical services

Healthcare and social assistance

Mining

Financial and insurance services

Construction

Administrative and support services

Retail trade

Wholesale trade

Arts and recreation services

Transport, postal and warehousing

Rental, hiring and real estate services

Accommodation and food services

Public administration and safety

Ownership of dwellings2

Other services

Education and training

Agriculture, forestry and �shing

Electricity, gas, water and waste services

Manufacturing

5.1

4.7

4.4

4.2

4.2

3.4

3.2

3.1

3.0

2.8

2.7

2.7

2.5

2.4

2.1

1.8

1.7

1.4

1.2

0.5Notes: 1. Goods comprise agriculture, forestry and fishing, manufacturing

and mining. 2. Ownership of dwellings is not classified as a good or service.

Sources: Australian Bureau of Statistics, 2021, Australian National Accounts:

National Income, Expenditure and Product, Table 6; Austrade

Growth by industry in Australia’s real gross value added

Compound annual growth rate, 1990 to 2020

Service industries power ahead

The Australian services sector grew by 3.2% per

year in the three decades to December 2020,

outpacing growth in the goods sector. The

information, media and telecommunications

sector grew fastest, at a compound annual

growth rate of 5.1% over the last 30 years,

followed by professional, scientific and technical

services (4.7%), and healthcare and social

assistance (4.4%).

All-industries average growth:

2.9% per annum

Services: 3.2%

Goods: 2.3%

Not Classified as a good or serviceGoods1Services

Why Australia Benchmark Report 2021 13

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Exports underpinned by five key industries 16

A leader in new technologies 17

Abundant reserves of resources and energy 18

A major supplier of resources and energy to Asia’s industries 19

Australia’s surge in solar and wind renewables 20

A top agri-exporter to Asian markets 21

A clean, green source of food and natural fibres 22

Sophisticated financial markets 23

Australia’s A$10 trillion financial sector 24

A top destination for education and skills training 25

A recovering tourism sector 26

DYNAMIC INDUSTRIES02

Why Australia Benchmark Report 2021 14

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Strong global demand

for Australia’s resources,

energy and food

Australia’s primary industries powered

export growth in 2019–20. Resources and

energy exports reached A$290 billion after

growing by an average 8.9% per year since

2000–01. Asia’s economies are our principal

customers.

Investment in Australian critical minerals is

growing fast. This is due to soaring demand

for lithium-ion batteries, renewable energy

plants and high-tech manufacturing. Fresh

investment in new mines and processing

facilities will create a reliable source of global

supply.

Exports of agri-foods also reached a

new high of A$48 billion in 2019–20.

Beef alone generated exports of A$11 billion

in 2019–20. A national reputation for high

agricultural standards and clean, green

produce means Australian exporters earn

premium prices.

Australians have maintained their love of

domestic travel, making up for some of the

decline in international tourism. Australia’s

A$10 trillion financial sector continued to

grow in 2019–20, with total assets growing

9% per year consistently over two decades.

DYNAMIC INDUSTRIES02

Why Australia Benchmark Report 2021 15

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Australia’s globally significant industriesExports underpinned by five key industries

In a typical year, Australian trade rests on five

major industries: resources, energy, agriculture,

tourism and education. Australia is one of the

world’s top three exporters of resources and

energy. Australia’s farmers are world leaders

in the production of clean, green premium

produce. Meanwhile, Australia has large and

sophisticated financial markets, with the world’s

eighth largest pool of investment fund assets.

International student arrivals and international

tourism will remain minimal as long as borders

are closed. In 2019, around three-quarters of all

visitor spend came from domestic tourism, and

local visitors are sustaining the tourism industry

until international borders reopen.

Australia’s investment fund assets

(US$2.2 trillion, September 2020)

Eighth largest in the world.

Foreign students in tertiary education1

(8% of the world’s total, 2018)

Third largest in the world.

Merchandise export – mining and energy

(US$185 billion, or 6.4% of the world’s total, 2019)

Third largest in the world.

Merchandise export – agricultural products2

(US$35.4 billion, or 1.5% of the world’s total, 2019)

Top 19 in the world.

Tourism

(A$139 billion, 2019)

77% (or A$107 billion) of tourism spend comes from domestic travellers.

Notes: 1. Inbound students in tertiary education. 2. Agricultural products has

been defined as codes 0, 1, 4, 9, 21 to 26 and 29 of the Standard International

Trade Classification.

Sources: United Nations, 2020, UN Comtrade Database; Investment Company

Institute, 2020, Quarterly Worldwide Mutual Fund Market; Tourism Research

Australia, 2021, unpublished data; World Trade Organisation, 2020, World

Trade Statistical Review; UNESCO Institute for Statistics, 2021, National

Monitoring – Inbound internationally mobile students by continent of origin;

Austrade

Why Australia Benchmark Report 2021 16

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Sources: 1. KPMG, 2020, KPMG Fintech Landscape 2020. 2. KPMG, 2020,

Pulse of Fintech H1 2020. Investment activity comprises venture capital,

private equity, and mergers and acquisitions. 3. KPMG and H2 Ventures,

2019, FinTech 100. 4. Austrade, 2021, EduGrowth: Sector overview and

statistics. 5. Frost & Sullivan, 2018, Global Digital Health Outlook. 6. WIPO

Patent Statistics, 2020, Total count by applicant’s origin (equivalent count).

7. KPMG, 2018, Talking 2030: Growing agriculture into a $100 billion industry.

8. Department of Agriculture, 2020, Drought & Emergency Management: A

new focus on agricultural innovation investments to harness collective power

of RDCs.

Australia’s tech credentialsA leader in new technologies

Australian entrepreneurs and academics work

well together. They have pioneered world-class

technologies in agriculture, education, financial

services and health. Innovation includes

the use of blockchain in finance, immersive

simulation technologies in education, robotics in

medical procedures and the Internet of Things

in agriculture. Australia is also recognised

as a world leader in silicon-based quantum

computing research.

A$800 million invested annually

through 15 Rural R&D Corporations8

500 medtech companies

733 active fintech companies1

400 agtech & foodtech companies7

600 edtech companies4

15 agtech incubators/acceleratorsA$2.2 billion edtech market

50% of companies are early-stage

startups

13,000–strong workforce

US$1.8 billion digital health market5US$1.2 billion invested (2019–20)2

Seven fintech companies

in the world’s top 1003

World top 20 for medtech patents6

A$20bn Medical Research Future Fund

Why Australia Benchmark Report 2021 17

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Sources: Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade, 2020, Trade statistical

pivot tables; Geoscience Australia, 2019, Australia’s Identified Mineral

Resources; BP, 2020, Statistical Review of World Energy; United States

Geological Survey (USGS), 2020, Mineral Commodity Summaries; Austrade

Australia’s commodity exports, 2019–20

Resources and energy, with global ranking for production and reserves

Abundant reserves of resources and energy

Australia is a major commodity exporter, with

resources and energy contributing almost three-

quarters of goods exports in 2019–20. Currently,

Australia has the world’s largest reserves of iron

ore, gold and uranium. Liquefied natural gas,

coal and uranium exports make Australia a major

energy supplier to Asian economies. Demand

for lithium-ion batteries used in electric vehicles

will power Australia’s lithium industry. Australia

is already the second-largest producer of rare-

earth minerals, and investment is set to surge as

customers secure global supply chains.

Energy OtherResources

Iron ore A$102.7bn

Gold and gold coin A$25.4bn

Aluminium & bauxite A$12.6bn

Copper A$6.7bn

Other minerals A$4.7bn

Con�dential minerals ores A$4.2bn

Other ores & concentrates A$3.7bn

Precious metal ores A$1.9bn

Crude minerals A$1.2bn

Zinc A$1.3bn

Re�ned petroleum A$2.4bn

Other commodity exports A$104.3bn

Natural gas A$47.5bn

Crude petroleum A$8.6bn

Coal A$54.6bn

Production Reserves

Bauxite 1 2

Black coal 4 4

Brown coal 6 2

Cobalt 3 2

Copper 6 2

Gold 2 1

Production Reserves

Iron ore 1 1

Lead 2 1

Lithium 1 2

Natural gas 7 15

Nickel 6 2

Rare earths 2 6

Production Reserves

Rutile 1 1

Silver 6 3

Tantalum 7 1

Uranium 3 1

Zinc 3 1

Zirconium 1 1

Australia’s world ranking for resources and energy

Why Australia Benchmark Report 2021 18

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Australia’s resources and energy sector, 2000–01 to 2020–21

Nominal value of exports1, 2000–01 to 2020–21

A major supplier of resources and energy to Asia’s industries

Australia’s resources and energy exports have

increased by a factor of five in just 20 years.

Global exports topped A$291 billion in the

year to June 2020. Asia is the biggest buyer.

However, total exports will likely slip by

A$4 billion in 2020–21 because lockdowns

reduced industrial demand in Asia. Australia

aims to become a major exporter of renewable

energy. The Asian Renewable Energy Hub –

straddling 6,500 square kilometres in Western

Australia – will be the world’s largest solar and

wind farm region. The planned ASEAN Power

Link project in the Northern Territory aims to

supply solar power to Indonesia and Singapore

via a 4,500-kilometre high-voltage subsea

cable.

Notes: 1. Annual value of commodity exports, free on board (fob).

2. CAGR = Compound annual growth rate.

Sources: Department of Industry, Innovation and Science, Office of the

Chief Economist, 2020, Resources and Energy Quarterly; Northern Territory

Government, 2020, Australia-ASEAN Power Link Project; Austrade

0

50

100

150

200

20

01

–0

2

20

00

–0

1

20

02

–0

3

20

03

–0

4

20

04

–0

5

20

05

–0

6

20

06

–0

7

20

07

–0

8

20

08

–0

9

20

09

–1

0

20

10

–1

1

20

11

–1

2

20

12

–1

3

20

13

–1

4

20

14

–1

5

20

15

–1

6

20

16

–1

7

20

17

–1

8

20

18

–1

9

20

19

–2

0

20

20

–2

1F

Energy: CAGR² 8.2% (2000–01 to 2020–21)

Resources: CAGR 9.5% (2000–01 to 2020–21)

A$

bil

lio

n

116

175

200

79

Why Australia Benchmark Report 2021 19

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E = Estimate; TWh = Terawatt-hour.

Sources: International Renewable Energy Agency (IRENA), 2020, Renewable

Capacity Statistics; IRENA, 2020, Renewable Energy Statistics; Department of

Industry, Science, Energy and Resources, 2020, Australian Energy Statistics;

Austrade

Australia’s renewable energy generation volumes and world rankings

1993–94 to 2018–19E, TWh

Australia’s surge in solar and wind renewables

Renewable energy accounted for 20% of

total electricity generation in 2019 – a record

for renewables in Australia. Growth is brisk.

Renewables’ share of power generation

has tripled in a decade. In 2019, wind power

produced approximately 7% of Australian power,

solar another 6%, and hydro 6%.

World ranking World share %

Solar PV 10 1.8

Wind energy 13 1.2

Bioenergy 24 0.7

Hydropower 33 0.4

Total 21 0.7

1993–94 1998–99 2003–04 2008–09 2013–14 2018–19E

Te

raw

att

–h

ou

r

Pe

rce

nt

ag

e o

f to

tal e

lec

tric

ity

ge

ne

rati

on

Renewables: as a percentage of total electricity generation (right-hand axis)

0

10

20

30

40

50

0

2

4

6

8

10

12

14

16

18

2020

10

Australia’s gross energy production 2018

Why Australia Benchmark Report 2021 20

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Notes: 1. Includes all unprocessed food and live animals; raw hides, skins and

furskins; and all unprocessed textile fibres. 2. Export value of Australian food

and fibre is defined as the total export value of primary products (unprocessed

– food & live animals total); primary products (unprocessed – Other – Hides

skins & furskins raw); primary products (unprocessed – Other – Textile fibres

unprocessed & waste); and primary products (processed – food total).

3. The Asia region is defined as Asia and Oceania.

Sources: Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade, 2020, Trade statistical pivot

table; Austrade

Australia’s top 15 export destinations for food and fibre, 2019–20A top agri-exporter to Asian markets

Food and fibre exports reached A$48 billion

in 2019–20. Asia is a major customer. Of

Australia’s 15 top food markets, 12 are in the

Asia region3, and they account for almost

three-quarters of the nation’s agrifoods

exports. With a reputation for high agricultural

standards and a well-regulated food industry,

Australian produce commands premium prices.

Meanwhile, Australia’s network of regional free

trade agreements gives Australian growers

preferential access to Asian markets.

1. China A$14.5bn

6. Vietnam A$1.8bn

4. Korea A$2.9bn

5. Indonesia A$2.1bn

7. New Zealand A$1.7bn

14. UAE A$0.7bn

15. UK A$0.6bn

2. Japan A$5.1bn

3. US A$4.3bn

9. Hong Kong SAR A$1.1bn13. Taiwan A$0.8bn

12. Philippines A$0.9bn

10. Malaysia A$1.1bn

8. Singapore A$1.4bn

11. Thailand A$0.9bn

Exports (A$ billion)

2019–20

Unprocessed 18.41

Processed 29.2

Total 47.52

Why Australia Benchmark Report 2021 21

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Australia’s major agricultural commodity exports, 2019–20E

Export value (A$ billion)

A clean, green source of food and natural fibres

Global markets have developed a taste for high-

value, branded, premium Australian produce.

Beef is the biggest export earner, generating

A$11.3 billion of overseas earnings in 2019–20.

Australia is also a major exporter of wheat,

wine, wool, lamb, fruit, sugar, beef cattle,

barley, mutton, canola, tree nuts, cheese, raw

cotton and rock lobster. Together, these top 15

products contributed almost 70% to the total

value of Australia’s A$53 billion of agricultural

exports in 2019–20.

Notes: 1. Includes wheat flour. 2. Greasy wool exports shown on a balance of

payments basis before 2015–16. 3. Includes buffalo. 4. Includes malt.

5. Excludes cotton waste and linters. 6. Includes dairy cattle and excludes skin

and hide values. 7. Milk intake by factories and valued at the farm gate.

8. Excludes skin and hide values. 9. Shorn, dead and fellmongered wool, and

wool exported on skins. 10. Includes all bovine for feeder/slaughter, breeding

and dairy purposes. 11. Excludes skin and hide values.

E = ABARES estimate.

Sources: Australian Bureau of Agricultural and Resource Economics and

Sciences, 2020, Agricultural commodities – Statistical Tables 13 and 17;

Austrade

Be

ef

an

d v

ea

l

Wh

ea

Win

e

Wo

ol²

La

mb

Fru

it

Su

ga

r

Liv

e f

ee

de

r/s

lau

gh

ter

ca

ttle

³

Ba

rle

y4

Mu

tto

n

Ca

no

la

Tre

e n

uts

Ch

ee

se

Ra

w c

ott

on

5

Ro

ck

lob

ste

r

$11.3

$3.9

$2.9 $2.8 $2.7

$1.6 $1.6 $1.6 $1.5 $1.4$1.2

$1.0 $1.0 $1.0

$0.5

Commodity A$ billion

Cattle and calves6 13.1

Fruit and nuts (excl. grapes) 5.2

Wheat 5.0

Milk7 4.6

Vegetables 4.4

Lambs8 3.9

Wool9 3.1

Poultry 2.9

Barley 2.4

Cattle exported live10 1.9

Nursery, cut flowers and turf 1.7

Pigs11 1.5

Canola 1.4

Softwood 1.4

Sugar cane (cut for crushing) 1.3

Farm, fisheries and forestry

production = A$66.2 billion

Why Australia Benchmark Report 2021 22

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Sources: 1. Reserve Bank of Australia, 2020, Assets of Financial Institutions –

B1; Reserve Bank of Australia, 2020, Securitisation Vehicles – B19; Australian

Bureau of Statistics, 2020, Managed Funds, Table 1; Australian Bureau of

Statistics, 2020, Australian National Accounts: National Income, Expenditure

and Product, Table 3; Australian Prudential Regulation Authority, 2020,

Quarterly general insurance performance statistics; Reserve Bank of Australia,

2020, Exchange Rates 2. Investment Company Institute, 2020, Research &

Statistics, Worldwide Market Data. 3. Standard & Poor’s, 2020, S&P Dow Jones

Indices World-By-Numbers. 4. Willis Towers Watson, 2021, Global Pension Assets

Study. 5. Bank for International Settlements, 2019, Triennial Central Bank Survey

of Foreign Exchange and OTC Derivatives Markets. 6. Bank for International

Settlements, 2019, Debt securities statistics; Austrade

Global significance of Australia’s financial marketsSophisticated financial markets

Australia is home to the world’s eighth largest

pool of managed funds and ninth largest stock

market (by market capitalisation of freely

floating stocks). The country’s foreign exchange

and debt markets are both ranked 10th in the

world. Australia’s US$2.2 trillion managed funds

sector is underpinned by a mandated retirement

savings scheme – called superannuation – that

has created the fifth largest pension system in

the world.

US$6,954 billion1

Assets of Australian financial institutions*

Five times Australia’s nominal GDP

*June 2020

US$2,333 billion4

Pension assets*

5th largest in the world

*2020

US$2,187 billion2

Fund assets under management*

8th largest in the world

3rd largest in the Asia-Oceania region

*September 2020

US$119 billion5

OTC foreign exchange daily average turnover*

10th largest in the world

5th largest in the Asia-Oceania region

*April 2019

US$1,428 billion3

Stock market*

9th largest in the world

3rd largest in the Asia-Oceania region

*Market capitalisation of freely floating stocks,

December 2020

US$2,199 billion6

International and domestic debt securities outstanding*

10th largest in the world

3rd largest in the Asia-Oceania region

*Total outstanding value, June quarter 2020

Why Australia Benchmark Report 2021 23

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Notes: CAGR = Compound annual growth rate from June quarter 2000 to

June quarter 2020.

1. ADIs: Banks, Building Societies and Credit Unions. RFCs: Money Market

Corporations, Finance Companies and General Financiers. 2. Other: General

Insurance Offices and Securitisation Vehicles. 3. Gross value added provides

a dollar value for the amount of goods and services that have been produced

in a country, minus the cost of all inputs and raw materials that are directly

attributable to that production.

Sources: Reserve Bank of Australia, 2020, Assets of Financial Institutions

– B1; Reserve Bank of Australia, 2020, Securitisation Vehicles – B19;

Australian Bureau of Statistics, 2020, Managed Funds, Table 1; Australian

Bureau of Statistics, 2020, Australian National Accounts: National Income,

Expenditure and Product, Table 3; Australian Prudential Regulation Authority,

2020, Quarterly general insurance performance statistics; Reserve Bank of

Australia, 2020, Exchange Rates; Austrade

Assets of Australian financial institutions, 1999–00 to 2019–20

A$ trillion, year ending June quarter

Australia’s A$10 trillion financial sector

Australian financial markets are large relative

to the overall size of the economy. The

total estimated value of all financial assets

rose to A$10 trillion (about US$7 trillion) in

2019–20. This equates to five times the value

of Australia’s GDP. The financial sector has

grown on average by over 9% per year over

the past 20 years, almost doubling its share of

the Australian economy. It is now the largest

contributor to the country’s gross value added.3

0

2

4

6

8

10

1999–00 2004–05 2009–10 2014–15 2019–20

ADIs and RFCs1

Managed funds

Reserve Bank of Australia

Other �nancial institutions2

AFI assets % of GDP (right-hand axis)

0

250

500

Ass

ets

(A

$ t

rill

ion

)

To

tal A

FI

ass

ets

as

a p

erc

en

tag

e o

f G

DP

262%

511%

Assets of financial institutions % CAGR1 1999–00

to 2019–20

Authorised Deposit-taking Institutions (ADIs) and

Registered Financial Corporations ( RFCs)1

9.7

Managed funds 8.8

Reserve Bank of Australia 8.4

Total all financial institutions (AFIs) including other2 9.2

Why Australia Benchmark Report 2021 24

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Notes: 1. Enrolment numbers reflect international student enrolments (by

country of citizenship). 2. 2020 data contains statistics relating to enrolments

in higher education courses in each Australian Higher Education Provider and

is correct as the January 2021 release of student data (revised monthly). 2020

data should be interpreted with caution. Under current COVID-19 conditions,

an enrolment does not confirm if a student was in Australia at the time of

reporting. 3. Excludes enrolments from New Zealand as students do not

require an international student visa to study in Australia. 4. ‘Other’ includes

enrolments from countries not known or where no further information was

provided. 5. From January to November due to availability of information.

Sources: Austrade, 2020, Market Information Package

International higher education enrolments by regional grouping1

Students on student visas only, year to November 20202

A top destination for education and skills training

Australia is the third most popular destination

for foreign students enrolled in tertiary

education. In 2020, Australia attracted almost

880,000 international student enrolments,

which were spread across universities, technical

colleges, vocational education training colleges,

English language courses and schools. About

80% of students arrived from Asian countries; in

higher education about 90% arrived from Asian

countries.

20195 20205

Total international higher education enrolments 440,308 418,018

Total higher education enrolments, % change 10.7% -5.1%

% share of all Asian students (excluding Middle East) 90.5% 90.6%

Top five broad fields of study 362,129 339,343

Management and commerce 176,150 155,901

Information technology 70,645 69,113

Engineering and related technologies 46,515 42,229

Health 37,015 37,983

Society and culture 31,804 34,117

NortheastAsia

Southern andCentral Asia

SoutheastAsia

Americas North Africaand the

Middle East

Sub-SaharanAfrica

North-WestEurope

Southern and Eastern

Europe

Oceania andAntarctica3

Other4

185.2k181.7k

155.9k

142.9k

57.4k53.9k

12.2k 12.1k 10.5k 9.6k 8.6k 8.2k 6.1k 5.5k 3.3k 3.1k 1.1k 1.0k 0.0k 0.0k

2019 2020

Why Australia Benchmark Report 2021 25

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Sources: Tourism Research Australia, 2021, unpublished data; Austrade

Domestic and international visitor spend in Australia from 2010 to 2019A recovering tourism sector

Tourism has faced a difficult year on the

back of national and state border closures.

Pandemic lockdowns in April 2020 saw almost

a complete stop in tourism-related travel. In

November 2020, monthly spend on domestic

overnight travel had fallen 34%, year on year.

Despite this, investment in Australian tourism

has continued and the opening of borders has

allowed Australians to resume exploring regional

centres.

0

20

40

60

80

100

120

140

160

Ex

pe

nd

itu

re (

A$

bil

lio

n)

Pe

rce

nta

ge

ch

an

ge

, ye

ar-

on

-ye

ar

2010

March April May June July August September October November

2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019

-100

-80

-60

-40

-20

0

-41%

-91%

-82%

-65%

-52% -53%-56%

-39%

78.482.3

86.6 89.094.3

99.9106.5

113.2

124.5

138.5International Domestic

-34%

Change in domestic overnight spend, 2020 COVID-19 affected months compared with 2019

77% of tourism spend comes from domestic travellers.Australian tourism is underpinned by strong, growing domestic and international demand.

Why Australia Benchmark Report 2021 26

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Australia’s roll call of innovation 29

An innovative, highly educated nation 30

Tech-savvy talent 31

First-rate digital and mobile networks 32

Significant investment in education 33

A big spender on research and development 34

High-impact research across multiple fields 35

A pioneer in health sciences and practical medicine 36

Top-ranking academic institutions 37

A leading contributor to UN Sustainable Development Goals 38

A warm welcome for talented migrants 39

INNOVATION & SKILLS03

Why Australia Benchmark Report 2021 27

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Highly skilled, tech-savvy

talent that attracts global

enterprise

Australian science and research contribute

significantly to global innovation. In terms

of research publications, Australian

academics are global leaders in 20 critical

fields, including space science, physics,

computer science and clinical medicine.

We are pioneers in many areas of health

and life sciences. Australian inventors have

developed scores of technologies. These

include innovations such as the electronic

pacemaker in 1926 and the cervical cancer

vaccine in 2006.

Australian universities are globally renowned

and the quality of their education builds our

world-leading talent. Today, seven Australian

universities rank in the world’s top 100, and

spending on education exceeds the OECD

average. Australians now rank in the global

top 10 for skills.

Our talent is not just home-grown. In 2019,

Australia had the third highest proportion

of foreign-born citizens among OECD

countries. This is twice the average for

OECD countries.

Today, Australia is a magnet for global

talent. From medicine to IT, high-skilled

professionals are drawn to world-class

institutions across the country. They bring

skills that help build Australian business,

science and technology prowess in the

Asia-Oceania region and around the world.

INNOVATION & SKILLS03

Why Australia Benchmark Report 2021 28

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Australia’s innovation credentials

Sources: 1. Economist Intelligence Unit, 2018, Preparing for disruption: Technological Readiness Ranking. 2. Shanghai Ranking Consultancy, 2020, Academic Ranking of World Universities. 3. Global Entrepreneurship and Development Institute, 2019, Global Entrepreneurship Index 2019. 4. Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation, 2020, CSIRO Annual Report 2019–20. 5. Department of Innovation, Industry and Science, 2020, Australian Innovation System Monitor. 6. Australian Bureau of Statistics, 2020, Education and Work, Australia, Table 13. 7. Austrade

Australia’s roll call of innovation

Australia is a nation of inventors and

entrepreneurs. Our innovations include the

electronic pacemaker (1926), the ‘black box’

flight recorder (1958), ultrasound (1961),

multi-channel cochlear implants (1970s), the

polymer banknote (1988), Wi-Fi (1990s), Google

Maps (2003) and a cervical cancer vaccine

(2006). With dynamic links between academia,

industry and public services, Australia welcomes

investment in its intellectual capital to help lay

the groundwork for future discoveries.

Ranked 1stFor technological readiness1

CSIRO ranks in the

Top 1%of the world’s scientific institutions

in 15 of 22 research fields4

Ranked 3rdFor number of universities

in the world’s top 1002

About 44%of Australian firms are

‘innovation-active’5

Ranked 6thGlobal entrepreneurship3

Around 47%of Australia’s workforce has a

tertiary qualification6

Why Australia Benchmark Report 2021 29

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Notes: 1. Per 100 people. 2. Index combines economic, social and educational

indicators. 3. E-participation is assessed based on features of national

e-government portals, especially the availability of online information on

policies and budgets, or free access to online government services. 4. Per

1,000 people, aged 15-69. 5. Human capital and research includes education,

tertiary education and research and development. 6. The H-Index is a numerical

indicator of how productive and influential a researcher is. 7. Generic top-

level domains (gTLDs) are one of the categories of top-level domains (TLDs)

maintained by the Internet Assigned Numbers Authority (IANA) for use in the

Domain Name System of the Internet. 8. Per 1,000 people, aged 15–69.

Sources: (a) World Economic Forum, 2019, Global Competitiveness Report;

(b) United Nations, 2020, Human Development Report; (c) International

Institute for Management Development, 2020, IMD World Competitiveness

Yearbook 2020; (d) Cornell University, INSEAD, World Intellectual Property

Organization, 2020, Global Innovation Index 2020; Austrade

Skilled workforce and innovation indicators – Global rankingsAn innovative, highly educated nation

International studies show that Australia’s

workforce is competitive across multiple indicators.

According to the World Economic Forum Global

Competitiveness Report 2019, Australia’s scientific

publication scores are among the world’s highest,

and so are its metrics for critical thinking in

teaching. Australia ranks the eighth highest in

the world on the UN’s Human Development Index,

an important comparative measure of literacy

and education. Australia also ranked in the top

nine for availability of foreign highly skilled labour,

according to a study by the International Institute

for Management Development.

Australia

US

UK

France

Germany

Japan

Korea

China

India

Singapore

WEF Global Competitiveness Report 2019

Ranking (141 economies)(a) in:

School life expectancy years 1 30 6 39 17 49 25 76 88 27

Diversity of workforce 3 7 14 65 16 106 86 78 80 1

Reliance on professional management 6 10 26 32 25 12 54 51 41 3

Willingness to delegate authority 8 7 22 42 16 27 85 57 71 17

Ratio of wage and salaried female workers/

male workers

10 39 12 23 27 62 59 56 128 31

Mobile-broadband subscriptions1 10 7 34 42 58 2 21 36 116 6

Scientific publications scores 10 1 2 5 3 6 18 13 21 23

Critical thinking in teaching 11 9 14 36 10 87 82 25 55 21

United Nations Human Development

Report 2019 Ranking (189 economies)(b) in:

Human development index2 8 17 13 26 6 19 23 85 131 11

IMD World Competitiveness Yearbook

2020 Ranking (63 economies)(c) in:

Foreign tertiary students per 100 inhabitants 1 29 7 24 23 45 41 55 60 4

Availability of finance skills 6 10 14 23 22 53 28 31 25 7

Availability of foreign highly skilled personnel 9 2 18 28 20 54 43 32 46 5

Attracting and retaining talent 10 6 32 33 22 14 11 29 37 18

The Global Innovation Index 2020

Ranking (131 economies)(d) in:

E-participants3 5 5 5 13 23 5 1 29 15 13

Entertainment & media market4 7 2 8 15 12 5 18 37 60 20

Government's online services 7 2 4 4 17 9 4 34 9 2

Human capital and research5 9 12 10 13 5 24 1 21 60 8

Citable documents H-index6 10 1 1 5 3 6 17 13 21 23

Generic top-level domains (TLDs)7, 8 10 1 11 18 14 31 43 74 99 23

Why Australia Benchmark Report 2021 30

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Notes: 1. The number in brackets represents the country’s global ranking

across 141 countries. The digital readiness of a country is determined by

examining seven components. These are standardised and summed to obtain

an overall digital readiness score measured out of a possible total of 25 points.

The seven components are basic needs; human capital; ease of doing business;

business and government investment; startup environment; technology

infrastructure; and technology adoption.

Sources: Cisco, 2019, Global Digital Readiness Index; Austrade

Cisco Global Digital Readiness Index1, 2019Tech-savvy talent

According to industry reports, Australia’s

population scores highly for digital skills. The

annual Digital Readiness Index published by

Cisco ranks Australia third in the Asia-Oceania

region, and twelfth globally. Australia scored

highly across all seven components of digital

readiness: basic needs; human capital; ease

of doing business; business and government

investment; startup environment; technology

infrastructure; and technology adoption.

Sin

ga

po

re (

1)

Lu

xe

mb

ou

rg (

2)

US

(3

)

Ko

rea

(8

)

Fin

lan

d (

11)

Au

stra

lia

(1

2)

UK

(13

)

Ge

rma

ny

(14

)

Ne

w Z

ea

lan

d (

15)

Jap

an

(16

)

Ca

na

da

(17

)

Fra

nc

e (

23

)

Sp

ain

(2

6)

Ma

lay

sia

(3

8)

Ru

ss

ia (

45

)

Ch

ina

(5

4)

Th

aila

nd

(5

5)

Me

xic

o (

66

)

Bra

zil

(6

7)

Vie

tna

m (

70

)

Ind

on

es

ia (

73

)

Ph

ilip

pin

es

(8

1)

Ind

ia (

101)

20.319.5

19.018.2

18.0 17.9 17.9 17.8 17.7 17.7

13.212.3 12.3

17.3

16.215.7

14.313.6

13.2

12.1 11.711.0

9.5

Why Australia Benchmark Report 2021 31

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Notes: Opensignal is the independent global standard for understanding the

true state of the world’s mobile networks based on measurements of real user

experience.

Sources: Opensignal, 2020, Benchmarking the global 5G user experience,

October 2020; Kongaut, Chatchai & Bohlin, Erik, 2014. “Impact of broadband

speed on economic outputs: An empirical study of OECD countries,” 25th

European Regional ITS Conference, Brussels 2014 101415, International

Telecommunications Society (ITS); Austrade

Disclaimer: Figures were reproduced with permission of Opensignal from

Benchmarking the global 5G user experience, published on 13 October©

2020 Opensignal Limited - All rights reserved. https://www.opensignal.

com/2020/10/13/benchmarking-the-global-5g-user-experience-october-

update

Mobile download speeds by market, during 1 July 2020 to 28 September 2020

Average download speed (Mbps)

First-rate digital and mobile networks

Australia’s 5G network is superb by international

standards. Average download speeds are

currently far faster than in many major

economies, including the US, Germany, the UK

and Canada. Access to high-speed internet and

mobile networks is central to economic growth

and job creation. A study across OECD countries

found that an increase in internet speed

positively affected GDP per capita.

US

Ne

the

rla

nd

s

Ge

rma

ny

Ho

ng

Ko

ng

SA

R

UK

Sw

itz

erl

an

d

Th

aila

nd

Ita

ly

Ca

na

da

Ku

wa

it

Sp

ain

Ta

iwa

n

Au

stra

lia

Ko

rea

Sa

ud

i Ara

bia

4G Download Speed

5G Download Speed

29

5260

93

32

107

24

129

25

130

47

166

11

170

29

171

58

184

26

185

29

201

33

212

43

216

61

336

377

30

Why Australia Benchmark Report 2021 32

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Expenditure on educational institutions across OECD countries1

As a percentage of gross domestic product, 20172

Notes: 1. Expenditure on all public and private institutions. 2. Latest

data available from OECD database: https://stats.oecd.org/Index.

aspx?DataSetCode=EAG_FIN_RATIO.

Sources: Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, 2020,

OECD.Stat; Austrade

Significant investment in education

Australia ranks seventh for spending on

educational institutions as a proportion of

GDP, among OECD countries. At 6.0%, the

country exceeds the OECD average of 4.9%.

Comparatively, Australia scores even higher

marks for tertiary education. Spending in higher

education increased from 1.5% of GDP in 2005

to 2.0% in 2017, propelling Australia into fourth

place among OECD countries.

No

rwa

y (

1)

Ne

w Z

ea

lan

d (

2)

Ch

ile (

3)

UK

(4

)

Isra

el (

5)

US

(6

)

Au

stra

lia

(7

)

Ca

na

da

(8

)

Co

lom

bia

(10

)

De

nm

ark

(12

)

Sw

ed

en

(13

)

Fin

lan

d (

15)

Sp

ain

(2

4)

Me

xic

o (

21)

Ko

rea

(18

)

Ge

rma

ny

(2

6)

Jap

an

(2

7)

Ita

ly (

30

)

Ire

lan

d (

33

)

Lu

xe

mb

ou

rg (

35

)

Total tertiary education

Primary, secondary education andpost-secondary non-tertiary education6.6

6.3 6.3 6.36.2 6.1

5.96.0

5.7

5.25.5 5.4

3.2

4.4 4.3 4.2

5.0

3.9

3.4

4.0

OECD average (4.9%)

Why Australia Benchmark Report 2021 33

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Notes: GERD % of GDP and GDP Values (PPP) refer to 2018 except for

Australia, New Zealand and Brazil (2017), and South Africa (2016). Researcher

figures refer to 2018 except for Australia (2010), Brazil (2014), Mexico and

South Africa (2016), US, Canada and New Zealand (2017). All data were sourced

from OECD Dataset: Main Science and Technology Indicators except for Brazil,

India and Indonesia from the UNESCO Institute for Statistics (UIS).

Sources: Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, 2020,

OECD Dataset: Main Science and Technology Indicators; United Nations

Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization, 2020, UIS Statistics;

Austrade

World of research and development

Size of circle reflects the relative amount of annual gross domestic expenditure on R&D (GERD)

in US$ current prices and purchasing power parity terms

A big spender on research and development

Australia’s annual gross domestic expenditure on

research and development (GERD) reached

A$34 billion in 2018–19. This places Australia

alongside the UK, Singapore and France as

one of the highest spenders on research and

development (R&D). Australia’s trend in R&D is

upwards. GERD rose by around 7% per year from

2000–01 to 2018–19 and it now represents 1.8%

of Australian GDP. This creates a pool of skilled

researchers who are globally competitive.

0.0

4.0

12.0

8.0

16.0

18.0

Italy

New Zealand

Russia

Canada

France Germany

NetherlandsUK

1.0 2.0 3.0 5.04.00.0

Turkey

Spain

Brazil

Gross domestic expenditure on R&D as a percentage of GDP

SouthAfrica

Indonesia

India

Nu

mb

er

of

res

ea

rch

ers

pe

r 1

,00

0 e

mp

loy

ee

s

Sweden

Japan

Korea

US

Australia

Taiwan

Mexico

Singapore

China

BRICS

North America

EU

Other OECDmembers

Other countries

GERD US$ current prices (PPP terms)Regions

>100 billion

20 billionto 100 billion

< 20 billion

Germany

Why Australia Benchmark Report 2021 34

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Sources: InCitesTM, Clarivate Analytics, 2020, InCities dataset, data as at

29 October 2020; Austrade

Relative impacts of Australian scientific publications by research field, 2015–19High-impact research across multiple fields

Australia’s research publications achieve an

impact that is at least 20% above the global

average in 20 out of 22 fields of academic

research. Australia’s four strongest categories

of published research are in space science,

physics, computer science and clinical medicine.

The 20 categories where Australia outscores

the global average reflect our diverse research

skills.

Space science

Physics

Computer science

Clinical medicine

Multidisciplinary

Engineering

Molecular biology and genetics

Materials science

Environment/ecology

Plant & animal science

Immunology

Mathematics

Biology & biochemistry

Geosciences

Microbiology

Agricultural sciences

Chemistry

Pharmacology & toxicology

Neuroscience & behavior

Psychiatry/psychology

Social sciences, general

Economics & business

0.0 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1.0 1.2 1.4 1.6 1.8 2.0

1.77

1.76

1.66

1.65

1.64

1.52

1.51

1.48

1.45

1.41

1.38

1.37

1.37

1.37

1.36

1.34

1.29

1.27

1.25

1.23

1.17

1.08

Global average: 1.0

Very high index

High index

Why Australia Benchmark Report 2021 35

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Health research by country1

Life science2 count score, 1 September 2019 – 31 August 2020

A pioneer in health sciences and practical medicine

Australia is one of the world’s top 10 countries

for contributing to life sciences research.

According to an index published by Nature, one

of the world’s oldest science journals, Australian

researchers and institutes published 1,168

academic articles in accredited journals in

2019–20. This puts Australia ahead of

Switzerland and Israel, and just behind France,

Canada and Japan.

Notes: 1. The number in brackets indicates the country’s ranking across 170

countries. 2. This list of life sciences comprises the branches of science that

involve the scientific study of life and organisms – such as microorganisms,

plants, and animals including human beings.

Sources: Nature, 2020, Life Science Index; Austrade

US

(1)

UK

(2

)

Ge

rma

ny

(3

)

Ch

ina

(4

)

Fra

nc

e (

5)

Au

stra

lia

(8

)

Ca

na

da

(6

)

Jap

an

(7

)

Sw

itz

erl

an

d (

9)

Sw

ed

en

(12

)

Isra

el (

15)

Ko

rea

(16

)

Sin

ga

po

re (

19)

Fin

lan

d (

20

)

No

rwa

y (

21)

Bra

zil

(22

)

Ind

ia (

23

)

Ru

ss

ia (

24

)

Ne

w Z

ea

lan

d (

31)

UA

E (

54

)

12,703

3,536

3,1353,038

1,734

1,531

1,346

1,168 1,133

255 229 222

835

540 503360

287 281165

28

Why Australia Benchmark Report 2021 36

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Sources: Shanghai Ranking Consultancy, 2020, The Academic Ranking of

World Universities; Austrade

Academic ranking of world universities, 2020Top-ranking academic institutions

Seven Australian universities are in the world’s

top 100, according to the 2020 Academic

Ranking of World Universities (ARWU),

published by the Shanghai Ranking Consultancy.

Australia’s academic performance keeps rising.

In 2020, 23 Australian universities were listed in

the ARWU top 500 ranking, compared with just

14 in 2004. The top performers are: University

of Melbourne; University of Queensland;

Australian National University; University of

New South Wales; University of Sydney; Monash

University; and University of Western Australia.

Economies Top 100 Top 200 Top 300 Top 400 Top 500 501 to

1000

Top 1 to

Top 1000

1 US 41 65 94 114 133 73 206

2 UK 8 20 28 34 36 29 65

3 Australia 7 8 15 22 23 11 34

4 China 6 22 32 49 71 73 144

5 France 5 8 12 16 17 13 30

6 Switzerland 5 7 7 7 8 1 9

7 Germany 4 10 19 24 30 19 49

8 Canada 4 9 12 18 19 9 28

9 Netherlands 4 9 10 10 12 1 13

10 Japan 3 7 8 10 14 26 40

11 Sweden 3 5 6 9 11 3 14

12 Belgium 2 4 5 7 7 1 8

13 Denmark 2 3 3 5 5 1 6

14 Singapore 2 2 2 2 2 2 4

15 Israel 1 4 4 4 6 1 7

16 Norway 1 2 2 3 3 2 5

17 Russia 1 1 1 2 3 8 11

18 Finland 1 1 1 2 3 5 8

19 Italy 0 3 7 10 17 29 46

20 Hong Kong SAR 0 2 4 5 5 2 7

21 Saudi Arabia 0 2 3 3 4 0 4

22 Korea 0 1 6 9 11 21 32

23 Spain 0 1 5 9 13 27 40

24 Austria 0 1 3 5 7 7 14

25 Brazil 0 1 1 3 6 16 22

Top 1 to 25 economies 100 198 290 382 466 380 846

Top 26 to 63 economies 0 2 10 18 34 120 154

Total 100 200 300 400 500 500 1,000

Why Australia Benchmark Report 2021 37

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Canada: 13 universitiesAustralia: 15 universities

Countries with1 university

China, Denmark,Hong Kong SAR,India, Iran, Mexico,Netherlands,Norway, Portugaland South Africa

Countries with2 universities

Brazil, Finland, France,Italy, Malaysia, Korea,Sweden and Taiwan

Countrieswith 3universities

Japan, Indonesia,Russia andthe US

Countrieswith 5universities

Ireland andNew Zealand

UK: 20 universities

Spain:4 universities

University of Sydney 2

Western Sydney University 3

La Trobe University 4

RMIT University 10

Monash University 17

University of Wollongong 31

University of Newcastle 45

University of Tasmania 47

Deakin University 55

Charles Sturt University 61

UNSW Sydney 66

Queensland University of Technology 70

Edith Cowan University 83

University of South Australia 87

Charles Darwin University 99

The world university rankings 2020: Impact on United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)1

A leading contributor to UN Sustainable Development Goals

Australian universities are good global citizens

when it comes to tackling poverty, gender

equality and climate change. This makes

Australian universities attractive partners for

collaborative research into sustainability, global

development and technology. It also encourages

overseas students to apply to Australian

universities. According to the UK’s Times Higher

Education Impact Rankings, 15 Australian

universities made it into the top 100 for having

an impact on UN Sustainable Development

Goals.

Notes: 1. To put together the ranking, the Times Higher Education mapped

how universities around the world are implementing to the 17 SDGs. The SDGs

are a global call to action to tackle poverty, climate change and inequality.

Universities were invited to submit data on how they were progressing on the

SDGs. More than 700 universities were ranked this year across the SDGs.

Sources: The Times Higher Education, 2020, Impact Rankings; Austrade

Australia Global ranking

Why Australia Benchmark Report 2021 38

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Notes: 1. Data refers to 2000 or the closest available year, and to 2019 or the

most recent available year. The OECD information is the simple average based on

rates presented. For Japan and Korea, the data refers to the foreign population

rather than the foreign-born population. 2. Israel’s high fertility rate and lower

net migration rate reduced its percentage of foreign-born population.

Sources: Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, 2020,

International Migration Outlook, Figure 1.12; Austrade

Foreign-born population across OECD countries, 2000 and 20191

As a percentage of total population

A warm welcome for talented migrants

Throughout its history, Australia has welcomed

immigrants from across the globe. In 2019,

Australia had the third highest proportion of

foreign-born citizens among OECD countries.

In 2019, 29% of our population was born

overseas, twice the average for OECD countries.

Migrants contribute directly to Australian trade

with their intercultural understanding and vital

language skills – especially in Asian languages.

Jap

an

(3

3)

Ko

rea

(3

2)

Ch

ile (

29

)

De

nm

ark

(2

4)

Gre

ec

e (

22

)

Fra

nc

e (

19)

Ne

the

rla

nd

s (

18)

US

(17

)

UK

(16

)

OE

CD

av

era

ge

Sp

ain

(15

)

No

rwa

y (

13)

Ge

rma

ny

(12

)

Be

lgiu

m (

11)

Ire

lan

d (

10)

Au

str

ia (

8)

Sw

ed

en

(7

)

Ca

na

da

(6

)

Isra

el²

(5)

Ne

w Z

ea

lan

d (

4)

Au

stra

lia

(3

)

Sw

itz

erl

an

d (

2)

Lu

xe

mb

ou

rg (

1)

Me

xic

o (

35

)

1 2 2

4

11

2019

2000

1213 13

14 14 14 14

16 1617

1819 19

47

3029

27

21 21

Why Australia Benchmark Report 2021 39

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Asian markets power export success 42

Strong trade links across the Asian region 43

Diverse exports provide resilience in a difficult year 44

A high-growth destination for A$4 trillion of foreign investment 45

A magnet for investment from North America, Europe and Asia 46

Foreign direct investment flows into Australia’s services sector 47

Australia’s liberalised trade with Asia 48

GLOBAL TIES04

Why Australia Benchmark Report 2021 40

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Free trade agreements that

spark competitiveness

Australia is an open economy that is deeply

integrated in global trade. A network of 15

free trade agreements grants Australian

exporters preferential access to markets

across Asia, and in North and South America.

In 2020, Australia joined the world’s

largest free trade agreement, the Regional

Comprehensive Economic Partnership

(RCEP). The RCEP encompasses 2.3 billion

people and 30% of global GDP. Australia is

negotiating further trade agreements with

the United Kingdom (UK), the European

Union (EU) and India.

Around three-quarters of Australia’s two-

way trade occurs within the Asia-Pacific

region. Market diversification is underway to

build a resilient trading network.

Australia also maintains strong trading links

with traditional partners. The EU and the

UK together account for 13.2% of Australian

trade and the US another 9.3%.

Investors trust Australia as a stable and

highly profitable destination for investment

capital. Despite bushfires, drought and

lockdowns, foreign investment grew 2.5%

in 2020.

Sustained investment in Australia

demonstrates our ongoing appeal. Over the

past 20 years, the total stock of foreign

investment in Australia has grown, on

average, 8% per year. The US, the EU, Japan,

the UK and Canada are still our biggest

investors.

GLOBAL TIES04

Why Australia Benchmark Report 2021 41

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Australia’s top 15 export markets, 2019–20

Notes: The Asian region is defined as Asia and Oceania.

Sources: Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade, 2020, Trade statistics,

Trade in goods and services: 2019–20 financial year; Austrade

Asian markets power export success

Close integration with dynamic economies in

Asia drives wealth creation in Australia. Twelve

of Australia’s top 15 export markets are in the

Asian region, generating total exports worth

A$357 billion in 2019–20 (three-quarters

of our total exports of goods and services).

China receives about one-third. A further 32%

collectively go to Japan, Korea, the US, the UK

and India.

Upper medium (A1, A2, A3)China A1Japan A1Malaysia A3

Lower medium (Baa1, Baa2, Baa3)Thailand Baa1Indonesia Baa2India Baa3

Prime (Aaa)Germany AaaNew Zealand AaaSingapore AaaUS Aaa

Credit rating (Moody’s):

High (Aa1, Aa2, Aa3)Korea Aa2Hong Kong SAR Aa3UK Aa3Taiwan Aa3

Non-investment (Ba1, Ba2, Ba3)Vietnam Ba3

5. UK A$20.9bn

1. China A$167.8bn

6. India A$18.6bn

9. Taiwan A$13.1bn

3. Korea A$27.6bn

2. Japan A$56.1bn

11. Hong Kong SAR A$9.7bn

10. Malaysia A$10.5bn

7. Singapore A$16.9bn

12. Vietnam A$8.0bn

8. New Zealand A$15.7bn

13. Indonesia A$7.9bn

14. Thailand A$5.3bn

4. US A$27.4bn15. Germany A$5.0bn

Total: A$475bn

Why Australia Benchmark Report 2021 42

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Notes: 1. Totals may not always add up exactly due to rounding. Refer to the

DFAT website (www.dfat.gov.au/trade/Pages/trade-and-investment) for more

information. 2. Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation 3. Regional Comprehensive

Economic Partnership 4. Association of South East Asian Nations. 5. The Asian

region is defined as the 21 economies that are members of the APEC forum.

CAGR = compound annual growth rate.

SAR = Special administrative region of China.

Sources: Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade, 2020,Trade statistics,

Trade time series data; Australian Bureau of Statistics, 2020, Australian

National Accounts: National Income, Expenditure and Product, Table 3;

Austrade

Australia’s exports and imports of goods and services

Current prices (A$ billion)

Strong trade links across the Asian region

Australia is a highly globalised economy, with

trade accounting for 44% of nominal GDP.

The Asian region5 accounted for almost three-

quarters of two-way trade in goods and services

in 2019–20. Although China is Australia’s largest

trading partner, trade is diversified across

the region. For example, the ASEAN group

of countries accounts for 13% of Australia’s

two-way trade, a higher percentage than with

the EU. The new Regional Comprehensive

Economic Partnership was officially inaugurated

in November 2020, and this bloc currently

accounts for almost 60% of Australia’s two-way

trade.

Rank

Selected economies

2016–17

2017–18

2018–19

2019–20

Percentage

of GDP in

2019–20

Share (%) of

total in

2019–20

CAGR (%)

From 2014–15

to 2019–20

1 China 174.3 195.0 235.1 251.2 12.7 28.8 11.7

2 US 66.5 69.9 76.7 80.8 4.1 9.3 4.1

3 Japan 68.5 77.4 88.3 79.1 4.0 9.1 3.2

4 Korea 38.6 52.4 41.4 38.9 2.0 4.5 1.7

5 UK 27.8 28.1 30.5 36.7 1.9 4.2 9.8

6 Singapore 24.7 27.9 32.1 31.1 1.6 3.6 1.9

7 New Zealand 26.4 28.3 30.6 28.7 1.4 3.3 3.1

8 India 25.7 29.1 30.4 26.2 1.3 3.0 7.3

9 Germany 20.9 22.4 23.2 21.8 1.1 2.5 4.1

10 Malaysia 19.8 21.4 25.1 21.6 1.1 2.5 1.5

11 Thailand 21.8 24.6 24.7 21.6 1.1 2.5 1.0

12 Taiwan 14.7 15.9 19.7 18.8 1.0 2.2 7.6

13 Indonesia 16.5 16.7 17.7 16.2 0.8 1.9 0.7

14 Vietnam 11.8 13.3 15.5 15.2 0.8 1.7 7.6

15 Hong Kong SAR 19.7 18.7 15.3 13.2 0.7 1.5 -3.2

Other economies 159.0 158.7 186.3 171.9 8.7 19.7 2.4

Total all economies1 737.0 799.7 892.6 873.1 44.1 100.0 5.3

By regions and groups

APEC2 528.3 587.0 652.1 645.3 32.6 73.9 5.8

RCEP3 408.9 463.2 518.4 511.7 25.8 58.6 6.5

ASEAN4 101.0 110.1 123.0 113.8 5.7 13.0 2.4

EU plus UK 100.7 106.5 114.9 115.4 5.8 13.2 5.4

Why Australia Benchmark Report 2021 43

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Notes: 1. Goods on a recorded trade basis, Services on balance of payments

(BOP) basis, original data; 2. Includes the DFAT adjustment for coal, based

on the ABS Catalogue 5368.0 September 2020, Value adjustments; 3. BOP

adjustment includes low-value goods for imports and timing and valuation

adjustments. 4. BOP basis. 5. Includes student expenditure on tuition fees and

living expenses.

Sources: Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade, 2020, Trade Statistics,

Monthly trade data; Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade, 2020, Trade in

goods and services, Australia’s goods and services by top 25 exports 2019–20;

Austrade

Australia’s trade in goods and services, 2019–20

Total two-way trade in 2019–20: A$873 billion

Diverse exports provide resilience in a difficult year

The value of Australia’s exports of goods and

services reached almost A$475 billion in

2019–20, about a 1% increase in challenging

times. Primary products accounted for 63% of

total exports. Iron ore exports increased by 32%

while coal exports fell by 22%. Beef exports also

increased, partly thanks to our high agricultural

standards. Overall, services exports declined

by 5%. This is because Australia’s diversified

services exports – including IT, telecoms, and

professional and financial services – didn’t quite

compensate for the fall in international travel.

Australia’s trade by level of processing1 A$ billion % Change

Exports of goods & services 2018–19 2019–20

Primary products2 294.5 298.8 1.5

Unprocessed food 13.8 14.3 3.5

Processed food 28.8 30.8 6.8

Minerals 109.6 132.2 20.6

Fuels2 132.0 114.8 -13.0

Other primary 10.3 6.7 -34.8

Manufactured products 53.8 52.2 -3.1

Simply transformed manufactures (excl nickel) 17.9 15.3 -14.5

Elaborately transformed manufactures 35.9 36.9 2.7

Other goods (incl gold) 24.2 30.7 26.8

Services exports 97.3 92.3 -5.1

Balance of payments adjustment3 0.9 0.9 -3.7

Total exports4 470.8 475.0 0.9

Imports of goods & services

Primary products2 64.2 57.7 -10.1

Unprocessed food 2.3 2.5 8.5

Processed food 18.4 19.7 6.8

Minerals 1.2 1.2 -2.5

Fuels 40.2 32.5 -19.1

Other primary 2.1 1.8 -11.8

Manufactured products 231.0 227.7 -1.4

Simply transformed manufactures (excl nickel) 15.4 16.6 7.9

Elaborately transformed manufactures 215.6 211.0 -2.1

Other goods (incl gold) 11.4 13.3 15.9

Services imports 101.8 87.4 -14.1

Balance of payments adjustment3 13.3 12.1 -9.1

Total imports4 421.8 398.2 -5.6

Two-way trade 892.6 873.1 -2.2

Top 13 commodities (goods & services)1 A$ billion % Change

Exports of goods & services 2018–19 2019–20

Rank Commodity

1 Iron ores & concentrates 77.5 102.7 32.4

2 Coal4 69.6 54.1 -22.2

3 Natural gas 49.7 47.5 -4.4

4 Education-related travel services5 37.8 37.5 -0.7

5 Gold 18.9 24.4 29.3

6 Personal travel (excl education) services 22.5 16.3 -27.2

7 Beef (fresh, chilled or frozen) 9.5 11.3 18.8

8 Aluminium ores & conc (incl alumina) 11.4 8.9 -21.9

9 Crude petroleum 8.5 8.6 0.9

10 Copper ores & concentrates 6.0 6.7 11.9

11 Professional services 5.6 6.0 7.0

12 Telecom, computer & information services 4.7 5.4 13.9

13 Financial services 5.0 5.3 7.3

Imports of goods & services 2018–19 2019–20

Rank Commodity

1 Personal travel (excl education) services 46.3 33.3 -28.2

2 Refined petroleum 25.1 21.7 -13.6

3 Passenger motor vehicles 21.6 19.1 -11.5

4 Telecom equipment & parts 14.6 15.2 4.4

5 Computers 9.8 10.4 6.5

6 Freight services 10.1 10.4 2.6

7 Crude petroleum 13.4 9.5 -29.5

8 Gold 5.5 8.8 59.7

9 Professional services 7.7 8.6 10.8

10 Medicaments (incl veterinary) 7.5 8.1 8.6

11 Goods vehicles 10.6 8.1 -23.6

12 Pharm products (excl medicaments) 4.8 6.1 25.5

13 Telecom, computer & information services 4.6 5.7 23.3

Why Australia Benchmark Report 2021 44

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Total foreign investment stock in Australia, 2000 to 2020

Total value in 2020: A$4.0 trillion

A high-growth destination for A$4 trillion of foreign investment

Australia is a highly attractive destination for

foreign direct investment (FDI). The total stock

of FDI in Australia has risen, on average, by

8.0% per year since 2000, reaching A$1 trillion

in 2020. Other forms of investment – including

portfolio investment – grew by 8.4% per year,

taking total foreign investment to A$4 trillion.

As a percentage of GDP, the total value of

foreign investment stock grew from 120% in

2000 to 206% in 2020. Foreign investment was

depressed by drought, bushfires and lockdowns

in 2020, but still grew by 2.5%.

Notes: 1. Other investment is the balance of total investment less direct

investment. As such, it represents portfolio investment, financial derivatives

and other investment categories from the source ABS data.

Sources: Australian Bureau of Statistics, 2021, Balance of Payments and

International Investment Position, Australia, Table 15; Australian Bureau of

Statistics, 2021, Australian National Accounts: National Income, Expenditure

and Product, Table 1; Austrade

0

1,000

2,000

3,000

4,000

5,000

Fo

reig

n in

ve

stm

en

t st

oc

k (

A$

bil

lio

n)

Fo

reig

n in

ve

stm

en

t st

oc

k a

s a

pe

rce

nta

ge

of

GD

P

0

25

50

75

100

125

150

175

200

120%

206%

Other Investment1 (left-hand axis, 8.4%)

Direct Investment (left-hand axis, 8.0%)

Total Investment as a % of GDP (right-hand axis)

20

01

20

00

20

02

20

03

20

04

20

05

20

06

20

07

20

08

20

10

20

11

20

12

20

13

20

14

20

15

20

16

20

17

20

18

20

19

20

20

20

09

Why Australia Benchmark Report 2021 45

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Notes: ASEAN = The Association of Southeast Asian Nations. CAGR = compound

annual growth rate. np = not available for publication but included in totals

where applicable, unless otherwise indicated. SAR = Special administrative

region of China.

Sources: Australian Bureau of Statistics, 2020, International Investment

Position, Australia: Supplementary Statistics 2019, Table 2; Australian Bureau

of Statistics, 2020, Australian National Accounts: National Income, Expenditure

and Product, Table 3; Austrade

Australia’s main sources of foreign direct investment stock, 2009–2019

Total value in 2019: A$1 trillion

A magnet for investment from North America, Europe and Asia

Australia attracts investment from around the

world. Over the past decade, foreign direct

investment from China grew by 18% per year;

Canada by 14%; Malaysia by 13%; Hong Kong

SAR by 12%; and Korea by 19%. Australia’s top

three overseas investors are the US, the UK and

Japan, with holdings equivalent to 10.3%, 6.4%

and 5.8% of Australia’s GDP respectively.

Rank

2019

Country

2009

A$ billion

2017

A$ billion

2018

A$ billion

2019

A$ billion

% Share

2019

% CAGR

2009–2019

Growth ($bn)

2009–2019

% of Australian

GDP, 2019

1 US 98.2 199.2 219.5 205.2 20.1 7.6 107.0 10.3

2 UK 61.0 89.4 98.8 127.1 12.5 7.6 66.2 6.4

3 Japan 45.6 97.9 109.1 116.1 11.4 9.8 70.5 5.8

4 Netherlands 31.4 55.9 52.0 54.8 5.4 5.7 23.4 2.7

5 Canada 12.2 32.6 40.4 47.1 4.6 14.4 34.9 2.4

6 China 9.1 38.4 41.8 46.0 4.5 17.6 36.9 2.3

7 Bermuda 9.5 42.2 44.5 41.6 4.1 15.9 32.1 2.1

8 Singapore 16.7 27.7 32.7 36.1 3.5 8.0 19.3 1.8

9 Germany 18.1 24.0 24.3 22.0 2.2 2.0 3.9 1.1

10 Virgin Islands, British np 20.8 22.0 21.9 2.1 np np 1.1

11 Hong Kong SAR 5.4 15.9 17.9 16.1 1.6 11.5 10.7 0.8

12 Malaysia 4.5 13.5 14.1 14.7 1.4 12.7 10.3 0.7

13 France 13.0 6.3 27.5 12.6 1.2 -0.3 -0.4 0.6

14 Switzerland 17.8 9.7 11.3 10.5 1.0 -5.1 -7.2 0.5

15 Luxembourg 3.2 9.4 8.4 8.1 0.8 9.6 4.8 0.4

16 Korea 1.3 5.4 6.8 7.5 0.7 19.3 6.2 0.4

Other economies 143.1 208.5 223.2 239.5 23.5 5.3 96.3 12.0

FDI stock – all economies 490.2 896.9 994.3 1,019.5 100.0 7.6 529.3 51.1

OECD 327.4 547.4 618.6 630.8 61.9 6.8 303.4 31.5

APEC 200.6 442.0 494.6 500.7 49.1 9.6 300.1 25.0

EU 144.8 196.0 224.5 238.1 23.4 5.1 93.3 11.9

ASEAN 22.1 46.6 52.6 56.6 5.6 9.9 34.5 2.8

FDI stock as a percentage of GDP 38.9 49.6 52.3 51.0

Why Australia Benchmark Report 2021 46

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Foreign direct investment stock in Australia by industry – value and percentage share

Total value: A$1 trillion in 2019

Foreign direct investment flows into Australia’s services sector

Foreign direct investment (FDI) powers

productivity growth in Australia’s domestic and

export industries. Services take just over half

of all FDI. From 2014–2019, FDI in services grew

by 10.7% per year which is twice the rate of FDI

growth in goods industries. Financial services is the

largest recipient in the services sector. Australia’s

export-focused mining sector is the biggest

primary-industry beneficiary, accounting for 35.3%

of the total, or A$360 billion. FDI in Australian

manufacturing currently stands at A$131 billion, or

12.9% of the total.

Notes: 1. Other includes administrative and support service activities

(A$7.9bn); public administration, activities of households and of

extraterritorial organisations (np); education (np); human health and social

work activities (A$3.4bn); arts, entertainment and recreation (np); other

service activities (np); and unallocated (A$114.5bn).

np = not available for publication.

Sources: Australian Bureau of Statistics, 2019, International Investment

Position, Australia: Supplementary Statistics, Table 15; Austrade

Mining A$360.1bn, 35.3%

Manufacturing A$131.4bn, 12.9%

Financial and Insurance A$113.2bn, 11.1%

Agriculture, Forestry and Fishing A$3.4bn, 0.3%

Real Estate A$110.9bn, 10.9%

Wholesale and Retail Trade and Related Industries A$60.3bn, 5.9%

Information and CommunicationsA$30.5bn, 3.0%

Transportation and Storage A$23.3bn, 2.3%

Utilities and Related Industries A$21.7bn, 2.1%

Construction A$18.1bn, 1.8%

Accommodation and Food Service A$9.3bn, 0.9%

Professional, Scienti�c and Technical A$8.0bn, 0.8%

Other1 A$129.2bn, 12.7%

Why Australia Benchmark Report 2021 47

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Notes: 1. The Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership has been

concluded but was not in force at the time of publication. As at March 2021,

Australia’s FTA negotiating agenda included: an Australia-European Union Free

Trade Agreement, an Australia-India Comprehensive Economic Cooperation

Agreement, an Australia-UK Free Trade Agreement, a Pacific Alliance Free

Trade Agreement and Trade in Services Agreement. Information on the status

of FTA negotiations can be found at: https://dfat.gov.au/trade/agreements/

Pages/trade-agreements.aspx. 2. The Pacific Agreement on Closer Economic

Relations Plus (PACER-Plus) entered into force in December 2020. Australia,

New Zealand, Samoa, Kiribati, Tonga, Solomon Islands, Niue and Cook Islands

are parties to the Agreement.

Sources: Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade, 2021, Australia’s free trade

agreements; Austrade

Australia’s liberalised trade with Asia

Australia benefits from 15 free trade agreements

(FTAs), including with the US, China, Japan and

Singapore, and with countries participating in

the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement

for Trans-Pacific Partnership. These FTAs cover

approximately three-quarters of all Australian

trade. Today’s network covers multiple export

sectors, from agriculture and seafood to resources

and energy. They make Australia a natural gateway

for trade between Asia-Pacific economies.

Australia’s free trade agreements

China 2015 Korea 2014

Japan 2015

Thailand 2005

Malaysia 2013

Singapore 2003

Indonesia 2020

New Zealand 1983

Peru 2020

Chile 2009

United States 2005

Hong Kong SAR 2020

ASEAN-Australia-New Zealand Free

Trade Area (2010-11)

Comprehensive and Progressive

Agreement for Trans-Pacific

Partnership (2018-19)

Regional Comprehensive

Economic Partnership

(concluded, not yet in force)

PACIFIC ALLIANCE

(under negotiation)

Has a bilateral free trade agreement with Australia (with date of entry into force)1

Participates in an existing or prospective multilateral free trade agreement with Australia1

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AUSTRALIA’S MULTILATERAL FREE TRADE AGREEMENTS

Why Australia Benchmark Report 2021 48

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One of the world’s most business-friendly countries 51

Lifestyle cities that are global drawcards 52

The fifth most valuable pension system in the world 53

Good governance, strong institutions and the rule of law 54

A stable and efficient business environment 55

Australian optimism and the entrepreneurial spirit 56

A global fifth place for digital government 57

Global top ten for high-income households 58

STRONG FOUNDATIONS05

Why Australia Benchmark Report 2021 49

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A free society with good

governance and an

enterprising spirit

Australian enterprise and optimism go hand

in hand. Australia is one of the best places

in the world to start a company, gain credit

and conduct business. Our entrepreneurial

streak is underpinned by sound regulation, a

lack of corruption and the rule of law. These

qualities make Australia a secure base for

expansion into the Asia-Pacific region.

There’s another reason why companies

invest in Australia: people like living here.

Australia’s capital cities are the envy of

the world. They support a free and easy

lifestyle that appeals to immigrant families

and global professional talent. Australia is a

natural place to nurture new, global teams.

It is no surprise that our cities top

‘liveability’ rankings in the Asia-Oceania

region. Our cost of living is relatively low.

Australia also scores highly as a digital

nation. In 2020, the UN ranked Australia

fifth in the world for digital government

services. The World Economic Forum also

scores Australia fifth for e-participation.

Above all, we help workers build long-

term security. Australia is home to a

A$3 trillion asset management industry

thanks to a compulsory pension system.

As a percentage of GDP, this is the third

largest bloc of retirement savings assets in

the developed world.

STRONG FOUNDATIONS05

Why Australia Benchmark Report 2021 50

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Key indicators of ease of doing business1One of the world’s most business-friendly countries

Australia is one of the easiest places in the world

to do business. According to rankings published

by the World Bank that compare the ease of doing

business in different countries, Australia rose four

places to 14th position in 2020. When comparing

economies with a population of more than 20

million, Australia now ranks fifth in the world,

behind Korea (first), the US (second), the UK (third)

and Malaysia (fourth). Australia ranked fourth for

gaining credit, sixth for enforcing contracts, and

seventh for ease of starting a business.

Economy

Overall

ranking

out of 190

economies

Rank

Strength of

legal rights

index

(0–12)

Depth

of credit

information

index (0–8)

Rank

Time

(days)

Quality

of judicial

processes

index (0–18)

Rank

Procedures

(number)

Time

(days)

Rank

Procedures

(number)

Time

(days)

New Zealand 1 1 12 8 23 216 9.5 1 1 0.5 7 11 93

Singapore 2 37 8 7 1 164 15.5 4 2 1.5 5 9 36

Hong Kong SAR 3 37 8 7 31 385 10.0 5 2 1.5 1 8 69

Denmark 4 48 8 6 14 485 14.0 45 5 3.5 4 7 64

Korea 5 67 5 8 2 290 14.5 33 3 8 12 10 28

US 6 4 11 8 17 444 14.6 55 6 4 24 16 81

UK 8 37 7 8 34 437 15.0 18 4 4.5 23 9 86

Malaysia 12 37 7 8 35 425 13.0 126 8 17 2 9 41

Australia 14 4 11 8 6 402 15.5 7 3 2 11 11 121

Taiwan 15 104 2 8 11 510 14.0 21 3 10 6 10 82

UAE 16 48 6 8 9 445 14.0 17 2 3.5 3 11 48

Thailand 21 48 7 7 37 420 8.5 47 5 6 34 14 113

Germany 22 48 6 8 13 499 12.5 125 9 8 30 9 126

Canada 23 15 9 8 100 910 11.0 3 2 1.5 64 12 249

Japan 29 94 5 6 50 360 7.5 106 8 11 18 12 108

China 31 80 4 8 5 496 16.5 27 4 9 33 18 111

France 32 104 4 6 16 447 12.0 37 5 4 52 9 213

Italy 58 119 2 7 122 1,120 13.0 98 7 11 97 14 190

India 63 25 9 7 163 1,445 10.5 136 10 17.5 27 15 106

Vietnam 70 25 8 8 68 400 7.5 115 8 16 25 10 166

Indonesia 73 48 6 8 139 403 8.9 140 11 13 110 18 200

South Africa 84 80 5 7 102 600 8.5 139 7 40 98 20 155

Philippines 95 132 1 7 152 962 7.5 171 13 33 85 22 120

Ease of

doing

business

Getting credit

Enforcing contracts

Starting a business

Dealing with

construction permits

Notes: 1. For more information on the ease of doing business metrics, please

visit the World Bank’s Doing Business website: https://www.doingbusiness.

org/en/rankings

Sources: The World Bank, 2020, Doing Business 2020: Sustaining the pace of

reforms; Austrade

Why Australia Benchmark Report 2021 51

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Cost of living: City rankings in Asia and rest of world

Mercer: Cost of Living Index global rankings, March 2020

Lifestyle cities that are global drawcards

Australian cities have become more

internationally competitive for expatriates, with

a lower cost of living compared to most major

cities in the Asia-Oceania region according to

Mercer’s 2020 Cost of Living Index. This makes

Australia a cost-competitive destination for

international companies that want to relocate

employees and their families, as well as for

young workers who want to broaden their

horizons.

Notes: 1. The Mercer Cost of Living Index compares the cost of living across

more than 400 cities around the world. The cost of living in all Australian cities

is considered lower than Mumbai, Bangkok, Taipei, Osaka, Guangzhou, Seoul,

Beijing, Shanghai, Singapore, Tokyo and Hong Kong SAR.

Sources: Mercer, 2020, Cost of Living Index; Austrade

New Delhi 101

Mumbai 60

Tokyo 3

Osaka 22

Taipei 28

Hong Kong SAR 1

Guangzhou 20

Seoul 11

Jakarta 86

Kuala Lumpur 144Singapore 5

Bangkok 35

Yangon 83

Hanoi 116

Ho Chi Minh City 111

Manila 80

Shanghai 7Beijing 10

Auckland 103

Wellington 123

Ashgabat, Turkmenistan 2

Zurich, Switzerland 4

New York, US 6

N’Djamena, Chad 15

San Francisco, US 16

Los Angeles, US 17

London, UK 19

Milan, Italy 47

Paris, France 50

Frankfurt, Germany 76

Vancouver, Canada 94

Toronto, Canada 98

Other global rankings

Perth 104

Adelaide 126

Melbourne 99

Brisbane 126

Sydney 66

Canberra 118

Why Australia Benchmark Report 2021 52

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Notes: 1. The assets/GDP ratio for individual markets is calculated in local currency

terms, and the total assets/GDP ratio is calculated in US$. Note that the ratio of

total pension assets to GDP declined from 2016 with the addition of China.

China’s pension assets represent about 1.5% of total GDP. 2. Only includes

autonomous pension funds. It does not consider insurance companies assets.

3. Includes Individual Retirement Accounts (IRAs). 4. Does not include the

unfunded benefit obligation of corporate pension plans (account receivables).

5. Only includes pension assets for company pension schemes. 6. Only includes

pension assets from closed entities. 7. Only includes Enterprise Annuity assets.

8. CAGR = compound annual growth rate. 9. na = not available for publication.

Sources: Willis Towers Watson, 2021, Thinking Ahead Institute and secondary

sources, Global Pension Funds Assets Study; Austrade

Global pension fund assets, 2020

Percentage of gross domestic product (GDP) ratio1

The fifth most valuable pension system in the world

Australia’s compulsory superannuation system

has helped create the world’s fifth largest pension

market, worth A$3 trillion (US$2 trillion) in 2020.

Australian pension funds also experienced one of

the highest growth rates of pension fund assets in

the world. Assets rose to 175% of GDP in 2020 – up

from 70% in 2000 – representing an annual growth

rate of 11.3% in US dollar terms. Rapid growth

reflects the vitality of Australia’s pension system,

a major driver of the country’s fast-expanding

managed funds industry.

0

20

40

60

80

100

120

140

160

180

200

220

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Au

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Sw

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3

UK

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Average of 22 markets = 80% of world GDP1

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Top 5 pension fund

markets

US$ billion

2000

US$ billion

2020E

Percentage share

of world total 2020

% 20-year CAGR8:

2000 to 2020

US 10,141 32,567 62.0 6.0%

Japan 2,418 3,613 6.9 2.0%

UK 1,256 3,564 6.8 5.4%

Canada 870 3,080 5.9 6.5%

Australia 275 2,333 4.4 11.3%

Other economies na9 7,365 14.0 na9

Total na9 52,522 100.0 na9

Why Australia Benchmark Report 2021 53

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Worldwide governance indicators, 20201Good governance, strong institutions and the rule of law

The quality of governance in Australia ranks

among the best in the world. Australia’s

regulatory environment, rule of law and lack of

corruption are all graded highly by the World

Bank. In Australia, fair and effective governance

is seen as the foundation for economic growth

and a free society. It generates confidence in

Australia among major investors. It also makes

Australia a secure base for multinationals

seeking a base for expansion in the Asia-Pacific

region.

Notes: 1. The Worldwide Governance Indicators (WGI) project reports

aggregate and individual governance indicators for over 200 countries and

territories over the period 1996–2019, for six dimensions of governance in

the above table. These aggregate indicators combine the views of a large

number of enterprise, citizen and expert survey respondents in industrial

and developing countries. They are based on over 30 individual data sources.

Economy scores are reported as percentile ranks, with higher values indicating

better governance ratings.

Sources: The World Bank, 2020, The Worldwide Governance Indicators, 2020;

Austrade

Economy

Voice and accountability

Political stability and absence of violence/terrorism

Government effectiveness

Regulatory quality

Rule of law

Control of corruption

New Zealand 98.0 97.1 94.2 99.0 97.6 100.0

Norway 100.0 92.4 97.6 97.1 99.5 97.1

Switzerland 97.0 94.8 99.5 94.7 99.0 96.2

Luxembourg 96.6 95.7 95.7 95.2 95.7 98.1

Sweden 99.5 86.7 97.1 96.6 98.6 98.6

Finland 99.0 79.0 98.6 97.6 100.0 99.0

Australia 93.1 88.6 92.8 98.6 93.3 94.2

Denmark 98.5 83.8 99.0 92.3 98.1 97.6

Netherlands 97.5 75.7 96.6 98.1 96.2 96.6

Canada 96.1 85.2 95.2 95.7 94.7 93.3

Germany 95.1 66.7 93.3 96.2 92.3 95.2

Ireland 94.6 82.4 86.5 93.3 88.9 89.4

Singapore 39.4 97.6 100.0 100.0 96.6 99.5

UK 90.6 63.8 90.4 93.8 91.3 93.8

Japan 78.3 85.7 93.8 88.5 90.4 89.9

France 87.7 58.6 89.4 90.9 89.4 88.9

Taiwan 80.3 70.5 90.9 90.4 85.1 82.7

US 78.8 57.6 91.3 88.9 89.9 84.6

Hong Kong SAR 54.2 36.7 96.2 99.5 91.8 92.3

Korea 72.9 61.4 88.5 82.2 86.1 76.9

Italy 79.8 61.0 69.2 76.9 61.5 62.0

Malaysia 43.3 51.0 79.3 73.6 73.1 62.5

India 57.6 21.4 59.6 48.6 52.4 47.6

Indonesia 52.7 28.1 60.1 51.4 42.3 38.0

Thailand 24.1 26.7 65.9 60.6 57.7 39.4

Brazil 58.6 24.8 43.8 48.1 47.6 42.3

Philippines 47.3 16.7 54.8 55.3 34.1 31.3

Mexico 45.3 21.0 45.7 59.6 27.4 22.6

China 6.4 38.1 71.6 42.8 45.2 43.3

Vietnam 11.8 53.8 53.8 41.8 53.4 34.1

Why Australia Benchmark Report 2021 54

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Notes: 1. Debt Dynamics measures the change in public debt-to-GDP ratio,

weighted by a country’s credit rating and debt level in relation to its GDP.

2. Social Capital measures national performance in three areas: social

cohesion and engagement (bridging social capital), community and family

networks (bonding social capital), and political participation and institutional

trust (linking social capital). 3. Trade Openness comprises indicators of

Prevalence of Non-tariff Barriers, Trade Tariffs %, Complexity of Tariffs and

Border Clearance Efficiency. 4. Tariffs on imports: Applied weighted mean

tariff rate for all products.

Sources: (a) World Economic Forum, 2019, Global Competitiveness Report;

(b) Institute for Management Development, 2020, World Competitiveness

Yearbook 2020; Austrade

Business efficiency and environment, 2020A stable and efficient business environment

Australia has one of the world’s strongest

and most efficient regulatory environments.

According to the Institute for Management

Development, the country ranks highly in terms

of credit ratings and justice. In the latest survey

of the World Economic Forum, Australia ranks

lowest in the world for debt dynamics (the

change in the public debt-to-GDP ratio); second

highest for social capital (which includes social

cohesion and engagement); and third highest for

trade openness.

Australia

US

UK

China

India

Japan

Korea

Hong

Kong

SAR

Singapore

WEF Global Competitiveness Report 2019 Ranking(a) in:

Debt dynamics1 =1 38 =1 41 =43 42 =1 =1 39

Social capital2 2 6 8 119 93 90 72 47 15

Trade openness3 3 14 25 71 131 9 67 2 1

Soundness of banks 5 25 52 95 89 33 62 3 2

E-participation =5 =5 =5 29 =15 =5 =1 n/a =13

Time to start a business (days) 6 31 =21 56 =90 70 =14 =2 =2

Energy efficiency regulation 7 12 8 21 33 31 3 n/a 19

Property rights 9 22 25 58 65 5 39 4 3

Non-performing loans % of gross total loans 10 14 8 26 106 15 3 6 17

IMD World Competitiveness Yearbook 2020 Ranking(b) in:

Index of three country credit ratings: Fitch, Moody's and S&P =1 11 18 =27 =49 31 =19 15 =1

State ownership of enterprises is not a threat to business activities 2 13 18 49 27 16 55 7 24

Justice is fairly administered 5 23 15 32 34 22 40 8 7

Tariff barriers4 5 11 =12 49 59 45 57 1 2

Intellectual property rights are adequately enforced 8 14 10 42 48 33 38 =12 5

Equal opportunity legislation encourages economic development 9 22 19 23 29 26 41 13 8

Competition legislation efficient in preventing unfair competition 10 25 8 44 38 22 =40 21 =5

Attracting and retaining talents is a priority in companies 10 6 32 29 37 14 11 15 18

Why Australia Benchmark Report 2021 55

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Notes: 1. The number in brackets indicates the country’s global ranking across

137 countries. 2. The Global Entrepreneurship Index is based on the weighted

average of three indices: entrepreneurial attitudes, entrepreneurial abilities

and entrepreneurial aspiration. For more information on the methodology, see

https://thegedi.org/global-entrepreneurship-and-development-index/

Sources: Global Entrepreneurship and Development Institute, 2019, Global

Entrepreneurship Index; Austrade

Global entrepreneurship by economy1

Global Entrepreneurship Index2, 2019

Australian optimism and the entrepreneurial spirit

Australia has one of the most entrepreneurial

business cultures in the world, according to

the Global Entrepreneurship and Development

Institute. Enterprise is a crucial engine of

economic growth and the organisation’s annual

index measures entrepreneurial attitudes,

abilities and aspiration. In 2019, Australia ranked

sixth out of 137 countries – behind the UK and

ahead of Germany, Korea, Norway, Japan, China

and ASEAN (including Singapore).

Aspiration

Abilities

Attitudes

US

(1)

Sw

itz

erl

an

d (

2)

Ca

na

da

(3

)

De

nm

ark

(4

)

UK

(5

)

Au

stra

lia

(6

)

Sw

ed

en

(10

)

Fin

lan

d (

11)

Ge

rma

ny

(15

)

Ko

rea

(2

1)

No

rwa

y (

24

)

UA

E (

25

)

Jap

an

(2

6)

Sin

ga

po

re (

27

)

Sp

ain

(3

1)

Ch

ina

(3

4)

Th

aila

nd

(5

4)

So

uth

Afr

ica

(5

8)

Ind

on

es

ia (

75

)

Ind

ia (

78

)

Ru

ssia

(8

0)

Ph

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pin

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(8

6)

Bra

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(118

)

Ho

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Ko

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SA

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13)

87

8280 79 78

73

70 70 6867

5856

5453 52

4746

3432

26 252523

16

Why Australia Benchmark Report 2021 56

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Notes: 1. The number in brackets indicates the country’s global ranking across

193 countries. 2. The EGDI measures the degree of digitalisation by the public

service. The EDGI is based on the weighted average of three indices: the

telecommunications infrastructure index, online service index, and human

capital index.

Sources: United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs, 2020,

E-Government Survey 2020, Annex Tables 2 and 3; Austrade

E-Government development by region1

UN E-Government Development Index, 2020

A global fifth place for digital government

The Australian Government is a technology early

adopter. The United Nations E-Government

Development Index (EGDI)2 ranked Australia

fifth out of 193 governments in 2020. Putting

government services online typically increases

the efficiency of interactions between

businesses, individuals and government

departments. For example, Australia’s

centralised online government service, myGov,

brings health, tax and welfare interactions into

one portal.

Telecommunications Infrastructure

Online Service

Human Capital

De

nm

ark

(1)

Ko

rea

(2

)

Est

on

ia (

3)

Fin

lan

d (

4)

Sw

ed

en

(6

)

Au

stra

lia

(5

)

UK

(7

)

Ne

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ea

lan

d (

8)

Sin

ga

po

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11)

Jap

an

(14

)

UA

E (

21)

Ca

na

da

(2

8)

Eu

rop

e

Ch

ina

(4

5)

Bra

zil

(54

)

Th

aila

nd

(5

7)

Me

xic

o (

61)

Ph

ilip

pin

es

(7

7)

Vie

tna

m (

86

)

Ind

on

es

ia (

88

)

As

ia

Wo

rld

Ind

ia (

100

)

Afr

ica

US

(9

)

0.980.96 0.95 0.95 0.94 0.94 0.94 0.93 0.93

0.920.90

0.860.84

0.820.79

0.77 0.760.73

0.690.67 0.66

0.64

0.60 0.60

0.39

Why Australia Benchmark Report 2021 57

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Notes: 1. The number in brackets indicates the country’s ranking in 2020

across 61 countries. 2. CAGR = compound annual growth rate. 3. Includes

Indonesia, Malaysia, Philippines, Singapore, Thailand, and Vietnam.

Sources: Economist Intelligence Unit, 2020, Data Tool; Austrade

Number of households (millions) with disposable income of more than

US$50,000 per annum – selected economies1Global top 10 for high-income households

Australia is a large consumer market and

Australian households have high disposable

incomes. According to The Economist

Intelligence Unit (EIU), Australia is the ninth

largest high-income consumer market, with

6.8 million households generating an income

above US$50,000 per year. The EIU estimates

that the number of high-income households

in Australia is growing by 3% per year, and will

reach more than 9 million households by 2030.

US

(1)

Ch

ina

(8

)

Jap

an

(2

)

Ge

rma

ny

(3

)

AS

EA

N-6

³

Au

stra

lia

(9

)

Me

xic

o (

16)

Ne

the

rla

nd

s (

12)

Ho

ng

Ko

ng

SA

R (

21)

Sw

itz

erl

an

d (

13)

2020

203094.4

112.2

7.0

56.8

23.7

32.9

19.9

31.5

3.8

10.16.8

9.2

2.7

7.63.7

7.13.3 3.4

1.7 2.3

3% CAGR2

Why Australia Benchmark Report 2021 58

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ABN: 11 764 698 227

18-19-235. Publication date: March 2021

ISSN 2205-9415 (Print)

ISSN 2205-9423 (Online)

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Why Australia Benchmark Report 2021