Making Melbourne more polycentric: an economic case
Insights
Employment, Transport
New report finds transforming Melbourne into a more polycentric city could generate a $27 billion boost to the economy.
SGS Economics and Planning acknowledge the First Nations Peoples of Australia and on whose Country we live and work. We acknowledge that the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples of Australia never ceded their sovereignty, and are one of the oldest continuing living cultures on Earth, have one of the oldest continuing land tenure systems in the world, and have one of the oldest continuing land use planning and management systems in the world.