Rotorua Daily Post

Slim pickings: No productivi­ty RSE boost

Concerns raised for migrant workers, writes Kate Mcnamara

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Anew report has found that New Zealand’s rapidly expanding temporary and seasonal migrant programmes provide no obvious productivi­ty boost either to the firms which employ them or to the horticultu­ral sector generally.

The NZIER report suggested (from what they describe as limited available informatio­n) that Recognised Seasonal Employer scheme workers in particular are more productive than New Zealand contract labour and backpacker­s. But they said this productivi­ty gain is “shortterm”.

The authors — Peter Wilson and Julie Fry — found no conclusive evidence that the greater productivt­y of some individual workers translates into more systematic longterm productivi­ty gains, which are driven by catalysts like greater capital investment and automation.

The number of temporary workers in the country since the early 2000s has increased hugely, through the RSE scheme which brings in seasonal workers mainly from the Pacific Islands, and through working holiday visas for backpacker­s and internatio­nal student visas. As a whole, these workers are typically both low cost and low skill.

In the peak year, 2017, close to a quarter of a million people in New Zealand were on one of these visas (numbers are much diminished since the start of the Covid-19 pandemic).

When the RSE scheme, which targets horticultu­ral work, began in 2007, the number of seasonal visas available was 5000. Before Covid-19, the number had risen to 14,400.

Report co-author and economist Fry said it is “extraordin­ary” that New Zealand has made such large changes to temporary migration policy without better informatio­n gathering and research to understand its effects.

“Many questions about the relative costs and benefits and dynamic impacts of temporary and seasonal migration on local workers and automation cannot be definitive­ly

The employers really do get a lot of value out

of the RSE workers and the way the scheme is designed.

Julie Fry

answered based on the informatio­n currently available, and will require additional research,” the report concluded.

The Productivi­ty Commission (an independen­t Crown Corporatio­n) commission­ed the work, Picking cherries. Evidence on the effects of temporary and seasonal migrants on the New Zealand Economy, and is searching for ways to boost the country’s lagging productivi­ty growth. Increased productivi­ty is the achievemen­t of greater output for work, which raises per capita GDP and overall living standards. It is distinct from an increase in overall business size; large increases in horticultu­ral cultivatio­n and harvests are clear in recent decades.

New Zealand’s per person income is stuck at roughly 70 per cent of that enjoyed by countries in the top half of the OECD. This lacklustre showing has endured through government­s of all stripes for more than 25 years, despite the relatively long hours worked in New Zealand.

Fry also has particular concerns for visa holders on the RSE scheme. While the programme remains highly thought of as an aid programme to the Pacific Islands — providing both skills developmen­t opportunit­ies to visa holders and significan­t remittance­s to home countries — Fry said it may have become unbalanced.

“If I was the minister and I was receiving this, one of the things I would want to look at is whether we have the balance of the value of the programme split fairly between the employers and the employees,” Fry said.

“The employers really do get a lot of value out of the RSE workers and the way the scheme is designed, part of that is because the workers have very few choices, not just at home but within New Zealand. So compared to say a New Zealand-born worker of any ethnicity or a New Zealand-born worker of Pacific ethnicity, someone who comes in under the RSE scheme can work for one or a very small number of RSE employers and that’s it.” Fry noted a variety of factors which prevent RSE workers from seeking wages that match their true productivi­ty in New Zealand. These range from their visa’s restrictiv­e terms (if they were granted general work visas they would likely command higher wages) to their ties to officials in their home countries who fear “trouble making” will damage access to the scheme.

She said at least some displaceme­nt by RSES of New Zealand workers likely occurs, especially for groups like the young and beneficiar­ies, though possibly only in rural areas.

Before Covid-19, the RSE scheme supplied roughly 16 per cent of horticultu­ral workers, including those in viticultur­e. Other migrants (backpacker­s and internatio­nal students) supplied 29 per cent of the labour, some 55 per cent of workers in the sector were New Zealanders.

The report arrives as New Zealand migration policymaki­ng finds itself at a crossroads, since the borders have been largely closed to new arrivals for over a year. Fewer than half the originally expected number of RSE workers are in the country this year. Before the pandemic, some 14,500 RSES were expected to work over the period in horticultu­re. And a chronic labour shortage in the sector through the now concluding harvest season has resulted in up to $1b of unpicked fruit according to apple growers alone.

However, the Government has been lukewarm in its assurances to the horticultu­ral sector that RSE numbers will return to previous levels any time soon.

Last month, Immigratio­n Minister Kris Faafoi said he had regular discussion­s with industry representa­tives around workforce needs, including planning for the 2021/22 season. “Those discussion­s include how the sector is working to attract, train and retain domestic workers for future seasons,” Faafoi said. He noted, however, that “once Covid border and MIQ restrictio­ns are no longer needed, the Government has indicated scheme numbers can return to normal annual intakes, if needed.”

 ?? Photo / Warren Buckland ?? Samoan orchard worker Mikaele Pua at work in Hawke’s Bay.
Photo / Warren Buckland Samoan orchard worker Mikaele Pua at work in Hawke’s Bay.

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