Virendra Pandit
New Delhi: Concerned at how foreigners are making a beeline to enter it, New Zealand said on Sunday that it was making immediate changes to its employment visa program after a near-record migration in 2023 which it said was “unsustainable.”
The changes include measures such as introducing English language requirements for low-skilled jobs and setting a minimum skills and work experience threshold for most employer work visas, the media reported on Monday.
The maximum continuous stay for most low-skilled roles will also be reduced from five years earlier to three years now.
“The Government is focused on attracting and retaining the highly-skilled migrants such as secondary teachers, where there is a skill shortage,” Immigration Minister Erica Stanford said in a statement.
“At the same time, we need to ensure that New Zealanders are put to the front of the line for jobs where there are no skills shortages,” she said.
Last year, a near-record 173,000 people migrated to New Zealand, the statement said.
New Zealand, which has a population of about 5.1 million, has seen rapid growth in its migrant numbers since the end of the pandemic, raising concerns last year that it was fanning inflation.
Neighboring Australia, which has also seen a big jump in migrants, said it would halve its migrant intake over the next two years.