Auckland city business and economy report 2007
Executive summary |
Relative economic performance |
Economic structure |
Affordable housing |
Population |
Labour market |
Retail trade and tourism |
Building and property |
Inflation, interest rates and the exchange rate |
Potential economic impacts of climate change |
Economic outlook
Economic structure
Auckland city occupies a prominent place in the regional
and national economies. The city employs 306,840 people, which is
51 per cent of regional and 17 per cent of national employment.
The government's Economic Transformation Agenda highlights
the importance of Auckland becoming an internationally competitive city. The
city's business composition is an important indicator of its competitive
strengths, and enhancing our reputation and performance in key sectors is
another way of improving our competitiveness.
This city has consolidated its specialised role in the
regional economy as the business hub.
Property and business services remain the
dominant sector, accounting for 23 per cent of total city employment.
Seventy-five per cent of the region's finance and insurance jobs, 71 per cent of
communication services jobs, and 68 per cent of regional employment in property
and business services are located within Auckland city.
Central government continues to view the ICT and creative
sectors as critical to New Zealand's economic transformation. Auckland city's
concentration of employment within these sectors has grown, with 41 per cent of
the nation's ICT jobs, and 39 per cent of national employment in the creative
sector.2
Industry's share of economy
Employment share as at February 2006 |
 |
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Source: Statistics New Zealand, Business Demographic
Survey
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| 2 The creative sector includes design, screen
production, radio, publishing, visual arts/crafts and photography, performing
arts and music. A full definition can be found in
Snapshot: Auckland's Creative
Industries (2005). ICT and creative sectors are not directly included in the
graph, as they are comprised of sub-industries of the industries displayed in
the graph.
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Published June 2007