Otago Daily Times

Pressure cooker: study reveals chefs’ workplace woes

Too much heat in the kitchen: survey shows toxic work conditions mean many chefs are getting out, finds hospitalit­y academics.

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CHEFS are in hot demand. “Chefs, chefs, chefs! Virtually impossible to find anyone,” lamented one Auckland restaurant owner recently. Australia is seeing a similar gap, with chefs ranked the eighth most indemand occupation. Given this culinary skills shortage, we might expect such soughtafte­r employees to be highly valued.

Apparently not. A new report on chef wellbeing and working conditions shows chefs in Australia and New Zealand experience significan­t financial hardship and mental health issues, with many wishing to leave their jobs.

This has major implicatio­ns for tourism, too, as jobs such as cheffing are “keystone occupation­s” in major destinatio­ns. When jobs can’t be filled, these places lose money.

Tourism revenue is booming, with visitors reportedly seeking more scenery, history and culture. The food chefs prepare in cafe´s and restaurant­s forms an integral part of the tourist experience. But despite the laws of supply and demand, the situation for chefs is unlikely to improve without radical changes to work practices.

The study is the first quantitati­ve survey to examine working conditions and mental health issues among chefs in both Australia and New Zealand. The survey was distribute­d through profession­al culinary associatio­ns, and final responses were captured as Australasi­a emerged from Covid restrictio­ns.

The survey also followed up previous Australian studies, which indicated exploitati­on was an industry norm, with chefs experienci­ng burnout and wage theft.

‘Banter, bollocking­s and beatings’

The kitchen environmen­t is well documented as being particular­ly harsh. As one British study titled “Banter, bollocking­s and beatings” made clear, an often macho culture can prevail, including bizarre induction rituals.

An Australian study published in 2022 showed chefs were significan­tly more likely than the general population to commit suicide. And even before the pandemic, the industry’s “toxic” workplace culture was blamed for mental health issues and high suicide rates among employees.

Most of our chef respondent­s were men, with an average age of 37. They had been chefs for 16 years on average. Of these, 42% originally came from outside Australia and New Zealand, underlinin­g the profession’s high mobility.

The results reveal disturbing insights into chefs’ working conditions. It was surprising to find nearly half (44%) of our sample were in precarious employment, given the skills shortage.

Twothirds (67%) of respondent­s worked more than 38 hours weekly, but a fifth of the chefs worked 5261 hours. Of these, 6.33% worked 62 hours or more — well above New Zealand’s still commonplac­e 40hour work week, and Australia’s legally prescribed 38 hours. Despite the fastpaced environmen­t, a quarter did not get their legally entitled breaks.

Economic insecurity was very evident. Financial hardship was reported by almost one in five chefs (1520%), and a quarter of respondent­s went without meals due to financial pressure. That those who feed others struggle to feed themselves seems a dark irony.

Twothirds also reported working when sick, an average of nine days each a year. PostCovid, this should concern health profession­als, policy makers and the broader community.

Leaving the industry

The 2023 Umbrella Wellbeing report, which recorded New Zealanders’ perception­s of their workplaces and wellbeing, warns that long working hours and poor workplace cultures have adverse health outcomes, with New Zealand faring worse than Australia.

Nearly one in 10 of the chefs surveyed suffered mental distress. Results showed high levels of physical and mental fatigue (“exhausted at work”, “emotionall­y drained”, “becoming disconnect­ed”).

Respondent­s reported disrupted sleep and unhealthy lifestyles. Almost 15% of the sample consumed alcohol five or more days weekly, with 11.4% saying they had consumed hard drugs (LSD, cocaine, heroin, methamphet­amine or ecstasy) in the past year.

One in five hospitalit­y profession­als experience­s depression, according to charity The Burnt Chef Project. In a spokenword performanc­e for the project, poet and writer Joe Bellman describes “defeated faces and lifeless eyes” behind the kitchen door, where “breaking the human spirit is just company policy”.

The majority of respondent­s said they were likely (with 20% extremely likely) to look for a new employer during the next year. Many of these new jobs will be outside hospitalit­y (which is classified within the overall tourism sector).

Another report commission­ed last year by the New Zealand Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment (MBIE) found a third of hospitalit­y and tourism workers had high intentions of completely quitting the industries. Reasons included low pay and conditions, stress and toxic work environmen­ts.

Mental health, healthy hospo

Maybe not surprising­ly, our survey showed intention to quit a job declines with better management support.

Failure to improve working conditions for chefs, however, will have lasting consequenc­es for the industry.

The Better Work Action Plan, the first phase of New Zealand’s Tourism Industry Transforma­tion Plan, was launched by MBIE in 2023 under the previous government.

It followed extensive consultati­on with representa­tives from hospitalit­y and tourism, Māori, unions, workers and government.

Its aim was to develop a sustainabl­e tourism workforce by addressing longstandi­ng issues of low pay and poor conditions across the sector.

The first step involved hospitalit­y and tourism workers receiving government approval to negotiate an industrywi­de fair pay agreement. However, the current coalition government immediatel­y scrapped fair pay legislatio­n.

The Australian government’s postCovid tourism recovery strategy, THRIVE 2030, has committed to “promote employment standards” regarding compliance obligation­s and fair work.

If effective, these would address the breaches evident in our study.

The hospitalit­y industry relies on young people actively choosing a culinary career. But MBIE forecasts show students are less likely to seek hospitalit­y jobs given these problems in the sector.

By chance, however, New Zealand’s new Minister for Mental Health, Matt Doocey, is also tourism and hospitalit­y minister.

It is now up to him to make the connection between his portfolios, and work to reduce the heat in the nation’s commercial kitchens. — The Conversati­on

Authors: Shelagh K. Mooney, associate professor, School of Hospitalit­y & Tourism, faculty of culture and society, Auckland University of Technology; Matthew Brenner, lecturer, The Hotel School Australia, Southern Cross University; Richard Robinson, professor of service work and employment, Northumbri­a University, Newcastle

 ?? PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES ??
PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES

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