Australian Financial Review I
Thursday 3 July 2008 I Letters / Opinions I
Matthew Tukaki
I think the
view expressed by former Immigration Minister Kevin
Andrews in his opinion piece “Nation needs guest
worker explanation” (June 30th)
deny the view that to do nothing is equally as
flawed as simply transporting a program from one
country to this. The approach by the New Zealand
Government is to do nothing more than to support
local industry and business, and while there is a
significant amount of engagement between the
employee and the employer, and less so from
authorities, the fundamentals exist. That is, a
ready supply of labour, the remittance of income
back to the islands with its potential positive
impact on local economies and the continued success
of small business.
If the Australian Government is to
adopt a guest worker scheme, the it needs to improve
on the New Zealand model, and one way of doing that
is by having a “middle man” who assists small
business with issues related to contracts and
pastoral care while working with government agencies
on matters to do with immigration. That said, the
point everyone appears to be missing is the very
real need to look at national skills reform as a
priority – and that includes changing some of the
entrenched views we have.
Recent Victorian government data
shows that more than 1.2 million Victorians have no
post-school qualifications. The figures on a
national basis are even less appealing. Maybe the
education revolution has less to do with technology
and more to do with cross training and retraining
our citizens for future workforce supply demands.
Maybe the chance to act on bringing Technical and
Further education and vocational education into the
classrooms of our secondary schools is upon us –
maybe it is time for a national workforce planning
strategy and then, maybe, there will be no need for
guest worker programs.
Of course, if that is the case,
then what do the government and opposition intent to
do when it comes to rising sea levels in the Pacific
and the forced evacuation of some of our nearest and
poorest neighbours? Now that will be an interesting
policy the Australian people will no doubt want to
see.
Matthew Tukaki, Sanseman
Government
This item was published on page 59 of the Australian
Financial Review 3/7/2008
Click on the
AFR
View a copy of the SansGov
Skills Reform
submission