The New Zealand Herald

CEOs fret over skill shortage

Survey: concern around speed of tech change

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Francis Cook

New Zealand CEOs are concerned about the speed of technologi­cal change and shortage of key skills, PwC’s 20th annual survey has revealed.

A total of 84 per cent of CEOs said they are worried about the availabili­ty of key skills in New Zealand with more than half planning on recruiting and increasing their headcount.

An equal 84 per cent said they are concerned by the speed of technologi­cal change occurring in the world, which is reflective of the apprehensi­on over key skills.

“We’ve seen a lot of big changes in the business world in the 20 years we’ve run the CEO survey, but more so over the last few years and New Zealand companies definitely face more challenges,” PwC chief executive and senior partner Mark Averill said.

Chief executives remain confident about revenue growth with 97 per cent of positive about the next three years, and 91 per cent believing they will hit growth targets for the next 12 months.

Kiwi chief executives are ahead of their overseas counterpar­ts with 72 per cent seeing new opportunit­ies in partnering with other firms compared with 48 per cent globally. Kiwis are also more interested in working with entreprene­urs and start-ups with 41 per cent saying they are willing, compared with 28 per cent globally.

Australia is still seen as a top contender to help New Zealand business grow.

“The Pacific-first mindset certainly is good for our future growth,” Averill said.

“Here in New Zealand, globalisat­ion has also changed the demographi­cs of our country. A World Migration report found that Auckland is more ethnically diverse than New York, Sydney and London.”

Cyber-security tops the highest concern for the second time, with 94 per cent of chief executives feeling that cyber breaches will negatively affect trust in their industry.

 ?? Picture / supplied. ?? PwC chief executive Mark Averill.
Picture / supplied. PwC chief executive Mark Averill.

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