The Timaru Herald

Employers struggle for staff in $100k jobs

- Anuja Nadkarni anuja.nadkarni@stuff.co.nz

The Covid-19 crisis is making it harder for some sectors to hire people for specialise­d roles that, in some cases, pay more than $100,000 a year.

Recruitmen­t company Hays’ latest constructi­on survey revealed most employers in the sector found it either ‘‘very difficult’’ or ‘‘hard’’ to recruit for senior roles.

On average the salary for roles in demand, such as constructi­on project manager, was more than $100,000 a year according to Trade Me’s salary guide.

Meanwhile, the average salary for sought-after site managers and quantity surveyors was $95,000.

Hays NZ managing director Adam Shapley said entry-level roles were the easiest to fill.

‘‘New Zealand’s constructi­on industry has long suffered from an acute skilled labour shortage and it seems that even Covid-19 has been unable to ease the skills gaps that exist in many areas.’’

He said employers in the constructi­on industry were seeking candidates with strong communicat­ion skills.

‘‘Many employers have experience­d the situation where a candidate looks amazing on paper and possesses strong technical skills but is unable to form relationsh­ips with peers.’’

Trade Me Jobs data showed the legal sector, government and council and IT also saw big drops in job listings and applicatio­ns.

According to Trade Me’s own pay scale, the median pay in IT was $100,000, in government and council $70,000 and the legal sector about $65,000.

The average number of job listings and applicants in the legal sector halved in August compared to the same time last year.

The government and council sector also experience­d a significan­t year-on-year drop of 30 per cent in applicatio­ns. Meanwhile, the number of job listings in the sector dropped by 15 per cent in comparison to the same period.

Job listings in property and IT also had smaller, but still notable, drops in the average number of applicatio­ns on job listings, down 15 per and 12 per cent respective­ly year-on-year.

There were more than 200 programmin­g and developmen­trelated IT jobs listed on Trade Me, which had a median salary of $95,000.

Head of Trade Me Jobs Jeremy Wade said, previously, roles in legal and IT would have appealed to overseas candidates, but with the borders closed, employers were seeing fewer applicants for their advertised vacancies.

‘‘New Zealand’s constructi­on industry has long suffered from an acute skilled labour shortage... Adam Shapley Hays NZ managing director

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand