Otago Daily Times

Entreprene­ur visa attracts 300 applicants in first year

- By PAUL MCBETH

WELLINGTON: The Government’s ‘‘global impact visa’’, designed to attract young entreprene­urs, has received 300 applicants from more than 50 countries hoping to fill the 100 spots in the first year of the fouryear pilot programme, Immigratio­n Minister Michael Woodhouse said.

Mr Woodhouse told Parliament’s transport and industrial relations select committee the visa — launched last year by Immigratio­n New Zealand in partnershi­p with the Edmund Hillary Fellowship — had ‘‘exceeded my lofty expectatio­ns for it’’. The visa gives migrant entreprene­urs a pathway to residency by giving them a work visa with open conditions allowing them to apply for permanent residency after three years.

Nigel Bickle, deputy chief executive of Immigratio­n New Zealand, told the committee investor visas had been successful, but typically missed entreprene­urs who were younger and might not necessaril­y have $10 million in capital to park ‘‘into a range of investment­s’’.

The pilot project was off to a good start and applicants were showing an interest in industries including augmented reality, virtual reality, biotech and agritech, he said.

Mr Woodhouse played down fears migrants were mopping up jobs at the expense of New Zealanders, telling the commit tee many longterm migrants were on working holidays or were internatio­nal students and that the strong inflow of net migration was being compounded by Kiwis returning from Australia and more residents choosing not to leave.

Still, there were sectors that needed migrant labour to plug gaps that would typically be filled by the essential skills visa, and employers were saying it was much harder to access internatio­nal labour markets through that mechanism than it used to be, Mr Woodhouse said.

‘‘These are highly correlated to where the demand is and where the work is and because of that, arbitrary cuts to labour markettest­ed work visas would be devastatin­g to some industries,’’ he said.

Rising immigratio­n has been blamed for putting upward pressure on housing prices, which are seen as becoming increasing­ly out of reach for young firsthome buyers, while also combining with a tourism boom to drive consumer spending and boost economic activity.

Despite some industries facing skills shortages and struggling to attract staff, the net inflow of migrants has largely been absorbed by employers creating new jobs, which has meant wages have been relatively flat in recent years.

The Treasury’s chief economic adviser, Tim Ng, told Parliament’s finance and expenditur­e committee this week he did not expect wage pressures to emerge until the unemployme­nt rate fell below 4.4%. New Zealand’s unemployme­nt rate is at 4.9% at present. — BusinessDe­sk

 ??  ?? Michael Woodhouse
Michael Woodhouse

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand