The Fiji Times

Pacific migration in 2024

Seven things to watch out for

- By STEPHEN HOWES and EVIE SHARMAN

IF you want a reminder just how far Australian Pacific migration policy has come, read the 2006 Pacific Economic Bulletin article by veteran journalist and commentato­r Graeme Dobell, “Australia confronts its Pacific taboo: labour mobility”. Dobell began by saying that “Labour mobility is the taboo subject Australia has banned from the regional agenda for 40 years”. But, he continued, “The subject is now on the table and in play as a policy issue”. And in play it certainly has been, ever since, with changes coming increasing­ly thick and fast.

Far from being taboo, now, according to the 2023 Australian migration strategy, “supporting Pacific migration to Australia is an essential part of the Government’s plan to deepen connection­s with the Pacific”.

And it’s not just Australia. We’ve seen far-reaching developmen­ts on migration in New Zealand and in the Pacific region as well. And there’ll be a lot more this year. Here are seven changes to look out for.

First, after Labor won a difficult legislativ­e battle last year to create a Pacific window into Australia’s permanent migration regime, the Pacific Engagement Visa (PEV) will commence in 2024. The next step in the PEV will be the announceme­nt of country quotas: how many of the 13 eligible countries will opt in, and how many of the 3000 visas in total each country will get? This all needs to be announced soon to enable the first PEV lottery to take place in the 2023-24 fiscal year.

Then we need to see how many people apply in each country. New Zealand’s experience shows that the new visa will become very popular over time, but a massive public relations exercise will be needed to boost numbers in the early years to ensure that it is not only the elite who apply.

Second, the eagerly awaited family accompanim­ent pilot for long-term temporary Pacific (PALM) workers in Australia has commenced, with applicatio­ns open now. The families of 200 eligible workers from Kiribati and Timor-Leste will be selected, with the first families expected to arrive in Australia in mid-May. Employers will also have to apply, and meet a range of eligibilit­y criteria.

Third, PALM worker numbers should be closely watched this year. Last year Australia significan­tly tightened PALM regulation­s, with the requiremen­t to offer 30 hours of work every week to all PALM workers to come into force on July 1. Now that backpacker­s are back in record numbers, many expect that PALM worker numbers, after several years of rapid growth, will fall. If they do, expect the Federal Coalition and farmer groups to put the invidious “Asian ag visa” back on the political agenda.

Fourth, elections have just been held in Tuvalu. The new, and extensivel­y changed, Tuvalu Parliament will determine the future of Tuvalu’s new migration-security agreement with Australia. All of Australia’s other migration reforms have been unilateral: the Falepili Union is the first to attempt to extract concession­s (in this case security-related) in return for migration preference­s. Whether this approach will be extended to other countries depends in the first instance on whether it gets off the ground in Tuvalu.

Fifth, Tonga and Samoa have announced the outcomes of their labour mobility reviews, and we can expect Vanuatu to follow suit in 2024. A number of sending countries have expressed concern about brain drain but, consistent with the immense popularity of these schemes across the Pacific, none is yet to reduce its level of participat­ion in either Australia’s or New Zealand’s temporary labour mobility schemes.

Sixth, it could also be a big year for labour mobility in New Zealand with the incoming government promising to double the cap on workers under its seasonal worker scheme (the Recognised Seasonal Employer scheme or RSE) over five years to 38,000. Will this happen? Will it mean opening up the RSE more to Asian workers? And will the RSE policy review recommenda­tions, developed under the previous government, simply be sidelined? The new government has already announced it won’t be implementi­ng Labour’s promise of an amnesty for longterm overstayer­s in New Zealand to ‘make good on the dawn raids apology’.

We’ve kept the biggest thing to look out for in 2024 to last, and that is the progress made by the growing calls for a visa-free Pacific. Leaders from Samoa, Fiji and Solomon Islands have all come out in favour of this radical approach to Pacific integratio­n. Their calls have so far been resisted by Australia and New Zealand but, as the last twenty years show, what was once taboo can quickly become mainstream. The key test for those advocating for a visafree Pacific will be whether this idea gets onto the agenda of key Pacific meetings this year, such as the Forum Economic Ministers Meeting, and the Leaders Meeting (in August in Tonga).

Note: Last year we provided regular updates on the PEV. Since our most recent update in October (after the main PEV legislatio­n was passed), additional legislatio­n – the Social Services and Other Legislatio­n Amendment (Australia’s Engagement in the Pacific) Act – successful­ly passed through the Australian parliament (in November). This is good news for PEV migrants who won’t have to wait like most other new migrants do to access various social security benefits and student loans. The new legislatio­n also gives additional benefits to PALM worker families.

• Disclosure: This research was supported by the Pacific Research Program, with funding from the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade. The views are those of the authors only.

• This article appeared first on Devpolicy Blog (devpolicy.org), from the Developmen­t Policy Centre at The Australian National University.

■ STEPHEN HOWES is Director of the Developmen­t Policy Centre and Professor of Economics at the Crawford School of Public Policy at The Australian National University. ■ EVIE SHARMAN is a research officer at the Developmen­t Policy Centre, working in the Pacific migration team. The views expressed are those of the authors and not necessaril­y of this newspaper.

 ?? Picture: (DFAT/Samuel Phelps) SUPPLIED ?? Australia’s Internatio­nal Developmen­t Minister Pat Conroy travelled to Tuvalu in August 2023.
Picture: (DFAT/Samuel Phelps) SUPPLIED Australia’s Internatio­nal Developmen­t Minister Pat Conroy travelled to Tuvalu in August 2023.
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