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Infometrics' Andrew Whiteford argues skill gaps will soon open up across a wide range of industries & occupations. He suggests importing skills could be part of the solution

Infometrics' Andrew Whiteford argues skill gaps will soon open up across a wide range of industries & occupations. He suggests importing skills could be part of the solution

By Andrew Whiteford*

The number of kids leaving school in New Zealand is now declining.

Couple this with an ageing workforce and it means that New Zealand employers are going to increasingly struggle to find trained individuals for their job openings.

The implications will be widespread across businesses, industries and regions.

More than ever we need to consider how we are going to face this challenge.

The number of kids leaving school peaked in 2013 at about 62,500. This year we estimate that the number of school leavers will fall to 60,000 and by the end of the decade the number will be down to 53,000. Some of these kids will go straight into the job market without many skills, while others will go into tertiary education and will enter the job market a few years later. Ultimately this all means that the number of young people entering the labour market is going to start declining.

While the number of young people entering the workforce is in decline, the number of old folk almost at retirement age is on the up. A decade ago about 8% of our workforce was aged 60 or above. Today that figure is approaching 15%. Many of these folk are ready to retire and we will need to do all the convincing that we can to keep them in the labour market.

The construction sector offers a case study into how tough these trends are going to make recruitment in the future.  The construction industry has been growing strongly over the past couple of years mainly due to the rebuild in Canterbury. As the rebuild winds down, Auckland will take over as the major creator of construction jobs. Auckland has a well-documented shortage of housing and the demand for accommodation is still growing rapidly, with strong population growth due to net migration. This trend will sustain high levels of building activity for quite a few years to come.

As a consequence of the growth in the construction industry Infometrics estimates that the employment of construction trades workers will grow by more than five percent on average per annum over the five years to 2019. Like most occupations and industries the construction trade workforce is rapidly ageing and more than four percent of the workforce will need to be replaced each year as the tradies retire or move into management or other roles. If we put these two forces together it means that for every 100 construction trades workers employed in 2014 the industry will need to find 50 new trades workers over the following five years.

This is a huge challenge for the construction industry at a time when the supply of new entrants onto the labour market is slowing and the Australian economy is picking up and will start luring our workers with bigger pay packages. The construction sector is probably an extreme example but all industries are in it together and will need to compete with each other for the valuable school leavers.

Industries and regions need to be prepared for the reality of the New Zealand labour market. They need to look at the training pipeline and consider the types of qualifications that are being created and compare this with future needs. An awareness of where the skill gaps are going to be will help inform future strategies and investment.

Employers will need to consider recruiting from non-traditional source of employees. Collectively the Maori, Pasifika and Asian share of the New Zealand population will increase from around 36% of the population in 2013 to 55% of the population in 2038.  As the ethnic composition of New Zealand changes employers will need to think about how they attract different ethnicities into their industries.  This is likely to require a shift in employment approaches in some industries – for example only 22% people in construction trades industries identify as being Maori, Pasifika or Asian.

Importing new skills into New Zealand will need to be a big part of the strategy to combat skill gaps and this opens up an opportunity. International education is recognised as an important contributor to the New Zealand economy. It is the fifth biggest export earner and has plenty of potential to build on recent growth, especially now with the weaker Kiwi dollar.  If we can identify the types of skills that will be needed in the future and can attract individuals from overseas to study towards obtaining those skills we will kill many birds with one stone. We will grow an important industry and create a pipeline of skills which are needed for the future. And of course we will benefit from new ideas and approaches which immigrants bring with them, as well as linkages to important markets around the world.

The future is going to be challenging.

Skill gaps will open up across a wide range of industries and occupations.

We need to get a better understanding of where these gaps are going to open and start preparing now.


Andrew Whiteford is Managing Director at Infometrics.  This article originally appeared in Infometrics’ newsletter and has been republished here with permission.

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11 Comments

So I did a search on 'Australian economy picking up' (because I was surprised to read that) seems to happen every single year. I wonder how that works?

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Try another search on 'interest rates are about to rise due to forecast inflation/economy rising'. That happens every year too. Quite incredible.

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What about the building industry and government get together to train future workers. At the same time utilise the large numbers of disengaged young people we have.
Two birds with one stone. We could call it 'apprenticeships'.
Brilliant idea. Why has nobody thought of this before.

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..because the vested parties need an excuse to keep immigration pumping..got keep those house prices up at all costs, fund those new Waikato motorways and so on...growth for growths sake..

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Andrew from infometrics has not been reading the metrics obviously. For a user friendly guide he should read Bernard.
http://www.interest.co.nz/news/78467/statistics-nz-reports-jobs-fell-04…

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Employers will struggle to find trained and qualified workers in Auckland because no-one can afford to live there on the pay that is being offered. Move to the regions though and it is an entirely different world - highly qualified and skilled people with a significantly better lifestyle and less money. Plenty of people lining up for a quality job at reasonable pay.

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Untill wages start to rise to give ppl more money to live there I agree.

Not too many well paid jobs in the regions, not for me anyway, try running unix/linux on seek or tm and there is zilch, or the pay is a joke.

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I've no idea what makes you think you're so special Steven but there isn't much difference in pay in "the regions" (does that mean anywhere outside Auckland now), the police, teachers, nurses are already bleating that they can't afford to live in Auckland. They get paid the same whether they're in AK or Invercargill.
This supposed skills shortage and the need for more immigrants is a myth. If we had a genuine skills shortage why are so many of our immigrants and temp workers arriving with few in demand skills and generally poor english. This report is contradictory, they are saying that they are concerned that many of our skilled workers will be off to Oz for higher pay. If we really do have a shortage our pay would be high and rising, they've shot down their own argument.

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the problem is as aucklanders move to the regions they are pushing the house prices up.
its all relative soon the regions will start to feel the squeeze on their pay packets paying for a roof.
in the long run increasing house prices by more than inflation or wage inflation hurts the economy as more and more money gets taken off the consumption side which are where the jobs and tax revenue comes from.

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Skills shortage - spoke to a major player in the freighting business last night and he said most of their drivers are now immigrant Indians. Turns out the usual suspects can no longer be trusted due to alcohol and more importantly drug problems.

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The Clutha district is awash with hundreds of job vacancies, including up to 350 at a Balclutha meat-processing plant.
http://www.odt.co.nz/news/dunedin/362011/cluthas-job-glut-draws-50-jobl…

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