Business

Australia may increase migration cap amid skilled-labour shortage

Official data shows 480,100 job vacancies in May, an increase of more than 100% from February 2020

Updated 3 years ago · Published on 14 Aug 2022 4:30PM

Australia may increase migration cap amid skilled-labour shortage
According to the Australian Statistics Bureau, there were 480,100 job vacancies in May, an increase of more than 100% from February 2020 prior to Australia closing its international border. – Pixabay pic, August 14, 2022

CANBERRA – The Australian government has flagged an increase to the country’s migrant intake.

Minister for Skills and Training Brendan O’Connor said the new Labour government was considering raising the annual migration cap from its current level of 160,000 to pull more skilled migrants, including health care workers and IT specialists to address labour shortages caused by the coronavirus pandemic.

According to the Australian Statistics Bureau, there were 480,100 job vacancies in May, an increase of more than 100% from February 2020 prior to Australia closing its international border.

The new migrant cap will be discussed among trade unions and employer groups at the government's jobs and skills summit in September.

“We’ve got a big job ahead to address the skills crisis but Labour will do more to train the local workforce and crack down on the exploitation of foreign workers,” O’Connor said today.

He also insisted that standards would not be dropped.

“We do have to be more sophisticated in measuring people's competencies,” he told Nine Entertainment newspapers.

“Everywhere we look there are shortages: the traditional trades, advanced manufacturing, retail, tourism, the tech industry, aged care, doctors, nurses.”

O’Connor said it was not a “binary choice” between increasing skilled migration and training local workers.

The increase in the migrant cap is expected to be formalised in the federal budget, which Treasurer Jim Chalmers will hand down in October. – Bernama, August 14, 2022

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