Farm and Quarry or Smart State?

Queensland's Economy Since 1989

Authors

  • Chris Salisbury University of Queensland

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1375/qr.18.2.145

Keywords:

Queensland economy, agricultural sector, primary production, technology, expertise and innovation, 'Smart State'

Abstract

A generation ago, Queensland’s economy relied heavily — as did the standing of the state government — upon a booming resources sector, a bountiful agricultural sector and a still-growing tourist market. ‘Rocks and crops’ (to use a favourite phrase of Peter Beattie’s) were mainstays of the state’s economic activity, and had long underpinned the government’s investment, development and budgetary planning. While to a large extent the same might be said today, critical changes have taken place in the local economy in the intervening period, cultivated by successive state administrations with the express aim of diversifying an economy that was overwhelmingly geared towards primary production. Now it can be argued that Queensland’s economy has metamorphosed into a modern, knowledge-based economy that demands greater emphasis on technology, expertise and innovation — what Premier Peter Beattie liked to promote with his catch-all phrase ‘Smart State’. But how effective was this push for diversification in renewing the state’s economic foundations? Since the advent of the Goss Labor government in late 1989, has Queensland really moved from a ‘farm and quarry’ to a ‘smart’ economy?

Author Biography

  • Chris Salisbury, University of Queensland

    Christopher Salisbury is a PhD candidate in the Centre for the Government of Queensland at the University of Queensland. His thesis investigates the policy background of the Beattie government's 'Smart State' strategy and the development of a knowledge economy in Queensland.

References

Ahern, M. 1985, ‘Government expectations for Queensland development’, Economic Analysis and Policy, vol. 15, no. 1, pp. 20–27.

Australian Bureau of Statistics 2011a, Australian National Accounts, State Accounts, cat. no. 5220.0, <http://www.abs.gov.au/ausstats/[email protected]/mf/5220.0>. Accessed 16 October 2011.

Australian Bureau of Statistics 2011b, Taxation Revenue, cat. no. 5506.0, <http://www.abs.gov.au/ausstats/[email protected]/mf/5506.0>. Accessed 14 November 2011.

Beattie, P. with Loukakis, A. 2005, Making a Difference: Reflections on Life, Leadership and Politics, Harper Collins, Sydney.

Beattie, P. 2010, Queensland Smart State Strategy: Remarks to the South Carolina Commission on Higher Education, public address, 19 October, <http://www.swampfox.ws/2010/10/20/powerful-presentation-former-premier-queensland-dr-peter-beattie-smart-state-model>. Accessed 12 October 2011.

Centre for the Government of Queensland 2011, Queensland Speaks, various interviews, <http://www.QueenslandSpeaks.com.au>. Accessed 3–4 November 2011.

Connolly, S. 2002, ‘Qld: Smart State not just dumb rhetoric’, Australian Associated Press, 8 March.

Department of the Premier and Cabinet 2008, Smart State Strategy 2008–2012: Queensland’s Smart Future, Queensland Government, Brisbane.

Department of the Premier and Cabinet 2010, Queensland Science: Building a Smarter Future, Queensland Government, Brisbane.

Evans, R. 2007, A History of Queensland, Cambridge University Press, New York.

Fitzgerald, R., Megarrity, L. and Symons, D. 2009, Made in Queensland: A New History, University of Queensland Press, St Lucia.

Office of Economic and Statistical Research 2007, 2006–07 Annual Economic Report on the Queensland Economy, Queensland Treasury, Brisbane.

Office of Economic and Statistical Research 2011, Queensland State Accounts, data tables, <http://www.oesr.qld.gov.au/subjects/economy /state-accounts/tables/qld-state-accounts-tables/index.php>. Accessed 16 October 2011.

Queensland Parliament 1989, Official Records of the Debates of the Legislative Assembly (Hansard), vol. 313, 7 September 1989, Queensland Government Printer, Brisbane.

Queensland Parliament 1990, Official Records of the Debates of the Legislative Assembly (Hansard), vol. 316, 5 September 1990, Queensland Government Printer, Brisbane.

Queensland Parliament 2004, Official Records of the Debates of the Legislative Assembly (Hansard), vol. 374, 18 August 2004, Queensland Government Printer, Brisbane.

Reynolds, P. 2002, Lock, Stock and Barrel: A Political Biography of Mike Ahern, University of Queensland Press, St Lucia.

Ryan, N. 1993, ‘Economic and industrial development policy’, in B. Stevens, and J. Wanna (eds), The Goss Government: Promise and Performance of Labor in Queensland, Macmillan Education, Melbourne, pp. 161–73.

Wadley, D. 1993, ‘Economy and finances’, in D. Wadley (ed.), Reef, Range and Red Dust: The Adventure Atlas of Queensland, Queensland Department of Lands, Brisbane, pp. 98–99.

Wanna, J. 2003, ‘Wayne Keith Goss: The rise and fall of a meticulous controller’, in D. Murphy, R. Joyce, M. Cribb and R. Wear (eds), The Premiers of Queensland, University of Queensland Press, St Lucia, pp. 357–86.

Published

2011-12-01

How to Cite

Salisbury, C. (2011). Farm and Quarry or Smart State? Queensland’s Economy Since 1989. Queensland Review, 18(2), 145-151. https://doi.org/10.1375/qr.18.2.145