The Borneo Post

Australia extends ‘backpacker visas’ to ease farm worker shortage

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SYDNEY: Australia announced yesterday that it was extending working holiday visas to allow young travellers to stay longer in the country to help meet a shortage of farm labourers.

The change allows travellers on so- called ‘ backpacker visas’ to remain in Australia for up to three years if they spend at least six months doing agricultur­al work. Previously the one-year ‘ Working Holiday Maker’ visas allowed travellers to remain for a second year if they took up work in the remote Northern Territory.

From July 2019, they can extend this to a third year as long as they spend six months working in agricultur­al regions suffering from particular­ly acute labour shortages.

The new rules were announced by Prime Minister Scott Morrison during a visit to farming communitie­s in the eastern state of Queensland, a key battlegrou­nd for his fragile coalition government which must face a national election by May.

Australia’s conservati­ve government has since 2017 been reducing the scope of temporary working visas as part of a broader effort to curb immigratio­n.

But the agricultur­e sector has complained of severe labour shortages during harvest periods, especially in rural Queensland, prompting yesterday’s changes.

More than 200,000 working holiday maker visas were granted in 2017-18, with Britain, Germany and France providing the most participan­ts from the 45 nations eligible for the programme. Last week a survey published by the University of New South Wales found that most internatio­nal students and backpacker­s working in Australia earned only a fraction of the minimum wage.

“Our study confirms that Australia has a large, silent underclass of underpaid migrant workers,” said UNSW lecturer Bassina Farbenblum. “The scale of unclaimed wages is likely well over a billion dollars.”

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