Herald on Sunday

Heather du Plessis-Allan

What’s our country’s plan?

- Heather du Plessis-Allan u@HDPA Heather du Plessis-Allan Drive, Newstalk ZB, 4-7pm, weekdays

There are tourism operators without tourists, restaurant­s without chefs, whitecolla­r employers without foreign skilled workers.

How crazy is it that none of us knows what happens to the country in less than six months’ time? Everything going to plan, we should all be jabbed by the end of the year. And then what?

No one knows. Not even Cabinet if you believe the Prime Minister, who says she doesn’t have a plan yet.

What is it that you think happens? I’m personally working under the assumption that vaccinatio­n leads to some reduced restrictio­ns.

Because, otherwise, what’s the point of us all getting the jab?

Do we get to travel overseas without quarantini­ng on return?

Shorter MIQ stays? Permission to bring in offshore workers again?

The return of $5 billion worth of internatio­nal students?

The return of some tourists?

We don’t know.

And that’s completely absurd given how many lives and businesses are waiting for this informatio­n.

Even more absurd is how little time before “next” arrives.

We have a clearer idea of what the health reforms will look like from mid2022 (the DHBs will be gone), or what the Three Waters Reform will look mid-2023 (only four big water agencies).

While both are important, they come nowhere near as important as what happens to our borders after the vaccine rollout.

Australia knows roughly what will happen.

After vaccinatio­n, they will ease border restrictio­ns on jabbed Aussies and only use lockdowns if Covid starts putting pressure on hospitals.

Singapore’s planning to dump border quarantine once they’re vaccinated.

The UK’s lifting all restrictio­ns in just over a week.

But, here, you have to piece tidbits together to decipher which way the Government’s leaning.

And when you do, there’s no suggestion vaccinatio­n means much.

One Cabinet minister’s suggested he might erect purpose-built MIQ facilities to run for the next few years, one adviser’s said border controls will run for another two to five years, another adviser’s warned businesses to prepare for maybe three years of closed borders but — fingers crossed — vaccinated travellers might be allowed into the country without quarantine by early next year. Maybe.

This is no way for a country to run its economy. Businesses have no idea what to plan for in only six months’ time.

We have growers labouring under the assumption they only have to make it through one more season without staff and then things will go back to normal.

There are tourism operators without tourists, restaurant­s without chefs, white collar employers without foreign skilled workers. All of them are just holding on for the other side of the vaccine rollout in the hope a jab equals a return to some normality.

This week we’ve learned just how bad our worker shortage is. We’re now at never-before-seen levels, close to full employment, at risk of burnout and poaching staff off each other in a game of musical chairs.

Will the jab mean we can start bringing workers in and fix this? Your guess is as good as mine.

Clearly, the PM and her advisers are thinking about this. They say they’re watching the world’s reopening for lessons.

But, frankly, many of us are thinking about it.

That now needs to turn into making decisions about it. Or even just giving us a rough idea about it.

Because even if the government doesn’t yet have a plan, some Kiwis getting their jabs do: plans to holiday, plans to visit offshore family, plans to get workers in.

Their expectatio­ns will only mount with each jab, each passing month. The government had better get itself a plan. Six months isn’t a hell of a lot of time.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ?? Photo / Mark Mitchell ?? The Government doesn’t seem to have a plan in place for after Kiwis are vaccinated.
Photo / Mark Mitchell The Government doesn’t seem to have a plan in place for after Kiwis are vaccinated.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand