Yoga Teachers, but Not Tradies, Makes a Joke of Skills Shortage Argument for Mass Immigration By James Reed

Another hard-hitting post by Macrobusiness.com.au, pointing out more absurdities of Australia's mass immigration program. As we constantly hear from the Big Australia lobby, hundreds of thousands of migrants are needed to meet a skills shortage. No matter how many migrants come, even a trillion, there would be a skills shortage. But it is all a sham; there are very few construction worker skilled migrants, but the draft skills priority list for migrants, does not have tradies and construction workers on the list, but instead yoga instructors, martial artists, and dog handlers are featured. As noted, "the Free Trade Agreement (FTA) signed with India four years ago baked in the importation of yoga instructors and chefs. The yoga instructor visa farce was basically a sop to India, alongside the recently signed migration pacts that give greater rights to Indians wishing to work and migrate to Australia than other nations."

The result of this madness, this surrender of Australia as Blainey once called it is the loss of control over immigration as Australian productivity drops, tent cities are created, and the once "lucky country" becomes the "sucky country," as Gen Z might say.

https://www.macrobusiness.com.au/2024/08/visas-for-yoga-teachers-but-not-tradies/

"Sydney-based housing developer Mark Bainey of Capio Property Group summarised Australia's farcical 'skilled' visa system as follows:

"The key thing holding back construction at the moment is the supply of skilled labour".

"We have a lot of unskilled labour but not enough skilled labour".

"Nobody wants to study a trade or be a tradie".

"The migration rules are not bringing in enough skilled migrants – they're bringing in yoga teachers but not enough tradies".

In June, the Housing Industry Association (HIA) expressed similar sentiments, complaining that "just 1,346 workers in construction trades have been granted temporary work visas in the nine months to March 2024″.

The latest paper from The Australian Population Research Institute (TAPRI) also explained how "very few construction tradies are being visaed under the employer sponsored or skilled permanent entry visa programs".

"For example, employers can sponsor such skills under the Employer Nomination Scheme which allows employers to sponsor skilled construction workers for permanent entry visas".

"However, over the May 1, to August 31 months of 2023, just 76 of these visas were granted to plumbers and 195 to electricians".

"Skilled construction workers are also eligible for the points-tested permanent-entry skilled visa programs. But again, very few are utilising this entry point".

"Again, over the same period from May 2022 to 31 August 2023 (while Labor was in office), there were only 139 of such visas issued to plumbers, 658 to carpenters and 391 to electricians".

The above criticisms follow the exclusion of tradies and construction workers from the draft skills priority list for migrants, whereas yoga instructors, martial artists, and dog handlers were included on the list.

Sadly, the Free Trade Agreement (FTA) signed with India four years ago baked in the importation of yoga instructors and chefs.

The yoga instructor visa farce was basically a sop to India, alongside the recently signed migration pacts that give greater rights to Indians wishing to work and migrate to Australia than other nations.

Check out the below mutual recognition agreement signed by Australia and India. It was clearly drafted by the Indian side on an ancient typewriter, punch holes intact!

Through its various dumb migration deals, Australia has effectively Swiss cheesed its immigration policy, reduced its ability to control migration numbers and quality, and reduced Australia's sovereignty in controlling its borders.

More generally, Australia has been left in a position where it is importing a huge number of people into questionable lower-skilled people-service professions that do not have genuine shortages.

These imported migrants, therefore, raise housing demand without significantly increasing supply.

Migrants are critically underrepresented in the construction industry

As a result, Australia is perennially short of housing and infrastructure.

Clearly, Australia requires a far smaller migrant intake centred on the skills the economy genuinely needs.

Net overseas migration must be set at a level below the country's ability to build homes and infrastructure.

Otherwise, Australia's housing market will remain in constant shortage, and living standards and productivity will continue to be hampered by the never-ending population boom." 

 

Comments

No comments made yet. Be the first to submit a comment
Already Registered? Login Here
Thursday, 24 October 2024

Captcha Image