Fiji Sun

Another bumper year for the Seasonal Worker Programme

- Feedback: maraia.vula@fijisun.com.fj

Under the Seasonal Worker Programme (SWP) 8,457 visas were issued between July 2017 and June 2018.

That is an increase of 37 per cent on the previous year.

That’s not the biggest relative increase, but it is the biggest absolute increase of 2,291.

That increase is bigger than the size of the scheme itself in 2013-14.

In terms of sending countries, the big winner in 2017-18 was Vanuatu, which surged past Tonga to become the leading sending country under the SWP with a market share of 40 per cent.

Tonga (with 2,790 workers, only 100 up on the previous year). Vanuatu (with 3, 350 workers, up 1,200 on the previous year) now between them send 73 per cent of the SWP workforce, slightly down from Tonga’s own share in 2012 of 81 per cent.

No other country sends workers in the thousands, but Timor-Leste – whose numbers almost doubled – is getting close, with 914 visas in 2017-18.

Samoa is in fourth place followed by Kiribati, Fiji, Solomon Islands and PNG.

At the current rate of growth, one would expect the Australian SWP to exceed New Zealand’s equivalent, the Recognised Seasonal Employer Scheme (RSE) by next year, as the latter is capped at 11,100.

There it still a long way to catch up with the number of backpacker­s working on Australian farms (estimated at about 40,000) but the SWP trajectory is certainly positive, and the growth rate much faster than I expected.

In Tonga, the number of workers participat­ing in both the Australian SWP and the NZ RSE has reached an impressive 13 per cent of the eligible sending population (those aged 20-45).

If every participat­ing country sent that proportion of workers, there would be over 500,000 workers under the two schemes.

A number way in excess of current demand. And there is no reason to think that 13 per cent is the saturation point: there are still entire villages in Tonga that are not participat­ing in the scheme. The share of women in the SWP remains stubbornly fixed at 14 per cent.

One bright spot on the gender front is the rise of Timor-Leste, whose share of female workers – at 32 per cent – is twice that of the next highest.

If Timor-Leste numbers continue to grow rapidly, it will be good both for the SWP as a whole, and specifical­ly for gender equity.

No other country sends workers in the thousands, but Timor-Leste – whose numbers almost doubled – is getting close, with 914 visas in 2017-18. Samoa is in fourth place followed by Kiribati, Fiji, Solomon Islands and PNG.

 ??  ?? Seasonal Worker Programme visas by the smaller sending countries
Seasonal Worker Programme visas by the smaller sending countries
 ??  ?? Seasonal Worker Programme country shares
Seasonal Worker Programme country shares

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