Waikato Times

$20m boost for digital technology sector

- Gerhard Uys

A high wage, low-emission economy is what New Zealand needs and the Government is investing in digital technologi­es to reach the goal.

David Clark, Minister for the Digital Economy and Communicat­ions, said the Government had approved another $20 million over four years towards two key initiative­s in the digital technologi­es industry transforma­tion plan.

This Budget 2022 allocation would help tech companies fulfil their potential as generators of high-value jobs and export revenue.

‘‘In 2020, the digital technologi­es sector contribute­d $7.4 billion to the economy. Since 2015 it has, on average, grown about 77% faster than the general economy,’’ Clark said.

Local tech would need to be trained by the best, as a result the Government also gave the thumbsup for senior key roles to be fasttracke­d to residency. Informatio­n and communicat­ions technology managers, software engineers, informatio­n and communicat­ions technology security specialist­s, and multimedia specialist­s would go on a green list, Clark said.

To be on the list, multimedia specialist­s would need to be paid $95,000 or more and the rest $120,000 or more, Clark said. ‘‘If we want our tech workforce to be world leaders, it makes sense they learn from world leaders.’’

The recently announced rebalance of the immigratio­n system will alleviate some of the immediate pressures on the sector, enabling businesses to lure skilled labour from overseas.

The Government would also support the growth of the software-as-a-service (SaaS) community and take New Zealand’s tech and innovation story to the world.

This included key global markets such as the US, Australia and Europe.

‘‘New Zealand has a number of globally successful SaaS companies and we want that to increase.

‘‘The SaaS subsector has experience­d sustained growth despite the pandemic, and nearly doubled both its export revenue and headcount within a five-year window,’’ Clark said.

The new funding would give the SaaS community momentum to further expand its network.

It would also support the delivery of short courses for digital skills developmen­t, Clark said.

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David Clark

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