Herald on Sunday

It’s time to take worker shortages seriously

- Liam Dann u@liamdann

The Government needs to start taking labour shortages seriously or it’s going derail its own plans for a smarter, more productive postCovid economy.

The shortage of workers highlighte­d in an Auckland Business Chamber survey last week was shocking.

The survey revealed an immediate need for 6700 roles in Auckland, with 1300 of those in constructi­on and about 1000 for the aged care sector.

That was feedback received from just 1000 of its 4000 member firms, within 48 hours of launching the survey — which is still live.

So it’s a snapshot, but one that reflects the anecdotal evidence we hear daily from business people, frustrated and worn out by the near impossible task of recruiting staff.

The chamber survey threw up some tough anecdotes.

The general theme was a merrygo-round of staff poaching within industries and a local business community consumed with recruiting at the expense of focusing on productive growth and long-term planning.

Chamber chief executive Michael Barnett said he had never seen shortages in the labour market this bad.

That statement was immediatel­y politicise­d.

Bad?

What’s bad for business owners must be good for workers right?

Well, it’s true that the tight labour market is good for job seekers.

We should always aim for a world where everyone has a job.

But the labour market is not that simple, particular­ly when it is being distorted by artificial­ly restricted supply.

And when you get to long-term inter-generation­al unemployme­nt, that’s a structural social problem that is very hard to fix.

Apply whatever political lens you want. There are myriad valid sociologic­al reasons why a segment of the population struggles to participat­e in the economy.

Business needs to play its part in addressing these issues. More commitment to training, sure.

Businesses facing an endless grind on recruitmen­t can’t thrive, though. They’re not in a good position to address structural issues.

That’s where we are getting to now. Business is not booming.

Consumer demand is holding up better than we feared last year.

But supply-side constraint­s are creating an illusion that this economy is stronger than it is.

Finance Minister Grant Robertson rightly points out that these are better problems to have than unemployme­nt and recession.

They are, however, the problems we now face.

They are problems that need to be addressed before we lose the valuable window of opportunit­y we earned last year.

The reality, of course, is that the shortages are mostly a symptom of a pandemic we can’t do much about.

Nobody with any credibilit­y is

arguing that we abandon a healthand science-led border policy.

So for now, all our immigratio­n issues are Covid-19 management issues.

The Government’s proposed immigratio­n policy reset — however radical it ends up being — is still a long way from being relevant.

The Productivi­ty Commission has only just called for submission­s of interest on a review that will eventually inform policy when the borders can be safely opened.

Whatever the Government believes is beneficial from a reset of immigratio­n policy shouldn’t be conflated with what is needed to get the economy through the next year.

Government critics certainly have conflated the two.

The political right is happy to lump them together because it shifts the blame to the government ideology rather than the more complex issue of how we manage borders.

That’s actually underminin­g more reasonable business calls for help — which mostly just revolve around more empathy, more efficiency and some kind of medium-term immigratio­n planning.

Robertson must understand all of this because he hears it week-in week-out at business functions and meetings he attends.

Quite where Immigratio­n Minister Kris Faafoi is in all of this is hard to know.

He has been largely absent from the debate.

Meanwhile the shortages will drive wage growth but they won’t necessaril­y make workers better off.

Inflation is an issue all around the world right now. There’s the trillions of printed money ($53 billion here), there’s shipping disruption and there is disruption to global markets.

Pushing up wages without driving productivi­ty just adds to inflation.

The cost of living becomes a race between prices and wages. History tells us that this is a race the poorest people always lose.

New Zealand faces a dangerous cycle of inflation in the next few years if we let this labour shortage roll on unaddresse­d.

It will push interest rates higher at a time when the mortgage debt burden is extreme for young homeowners.

Higher interest rates will also be a handbrake on business investment, putting another handbrake on hopes for boosting New Zealand’s productivi­ty.

The Government’s long-term goals of reshaping immigratio­n, upskilling local workers and driving capital investment to get business working smarter are all admirable.

They should carry on with the immigratio­n review.

But there is a different, more specific problem in need of attention right here and now.

We need Immigratio­n NZ working more efficientl­y to ensure skilled foreign workers already in the country can stay.

There are skills and training mismatches to be addressed. There appears, anecdotall­y, to be an untapped pool of older workers keen to do more.

We need a rare and difficult combinatio­n of bureaucrat­ic competence combined with pragmatism and flexibilit­y.

That’s not easy to achieve. But neither was beating Covid-19. The Government should rise to this challenge.

And even if the solutions are limited for the time being it would lose nothing and gain plenty by letting business know that it understand­s and is working on the issue.

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Photo / Getty Images

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