Neighbourhood Economics Ltd
Concentration RiskAbout
Neighbourhood Economics Ltd is a medium registered charity based in Croydon, VIC. It serves: first nations, adults, aged, overseas, ethnic groups, families, females, general community, males, other charities, homelessness risk, disability, rural & remote, unemployed, environment, other gender identities.
Top Contracts (1)
Social Enterprise
Financial History (7 years)
| Year | Revenue | Expenses | Assets | Surplus |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2023 | $534K | $953K | $700K | $-418,858 |
| 2022 | $1.4M | $1.3M | $1.2M | $142K |
| 2021 | $1.0M | $807K | $1.4M | $206K |
| 2020 | $1.5M | $1.3M | $769K | $143K |
| 2019 | $1.8M | $1.5M | $615K | $373K |
| 2018 | $1.5M | $1.6M | $663K | $-158,486 |
| 2017 | $1.1M | $1.7M | $1.3M | $-585,742 |
Community Evidence
External EvidenceIdentity
- GS ID
- AU-ABN-12164177931
- ABN
- 12164177931
- Sector
- Community
- Financial Year
- 2023
Focus Areas
Board & Leadership (4)
- Colin Duthiechair
- Anthea Smitsdirector
- Katherine Trebeckdirector
- William Mithendirector
Financials
- Revenue
- $534K
- Assets
- $700K
Method
- Match Confidence
- registry
- Cross-references
- 1 dataset
- Match Key
- ABN
- Relationships
- 10
Matched by Australian Business Number (ABN) — high confidence. This entity was found across multiple government datasets using the same ABN.
Data Sources
JusticeHub
External LinkThis entity is also tracked in JusticeHub with 0 interventions and 0 evidence records.
External ecosystem profile linked from GrantScope for additional context. JusticeHub content is maintained separately.
View on JusticeHubLocation Intelligence
- Postcode
- 3136
- Locality
- CROYDON
- Remoteness
- Major Cities of Australia
- SEIFA Disadvantage
- Decile 7/10
- LGA
- Maroondah
- SA2 Region
- Croydon - East
- Entities in Area
- 309
Disability Market Context
NDIS LayerThis organisation shows disability-related delivery signals. The strategic question is whether it sits inside a resilient market, a thin market, or a captured market where large providers take most of the money and local alternatives are scarce.