Jobs For Hawke’s Bay
Jobs For Hawke’s Bay
Thu, May 23 2013
Thursday I attended a briefing by the Ministry of Business, Innovation & Employment on Hawke’s Bay’s job prospects in coming years.
There was no new news. What the briefers had to say repeated what by now should be commonly known in the Bay:
• Demographic trends are quite
challenging — little or no population growth overall, with
the under-15 years of age and over-65s being the two growing
segments. [In fact, the most thorough research on NZ's
population future predicts that population in the country's
rural provinces has stopped growing ... possibly forever.]
• The biggest economic sectors in HB — agriculture
and food processing — also being the slowest growing (and
to a large extent, paying the lowest wages).
• A
persistent inability to prepare or match youth graduating
from school (or simply leaving) with existent jobs in the
region.
The audience proffered a range of solutions, all
sounding individually intelligent, but none capable alone
and in isolation of ensuring attractive jobs for our youth
or a vibrant regional economy going forward.
If there were ever a challenge that demands a regional strategy, with all players harnessed to and invested in it, employment growth is it.
The small-minded, like new political blood-brothers Bill Dalton and Stuart Nash, insist that this is not a problem local government can do anything about.
But their view is myopic nonsense.
What is required in Hawke’s Bay is mobilising the efforts of all the significant players and sectors who must cooperate for a better economic future …
• The education community (high schools and EIT)
— those who must educate and train our youth and help
expose them to the full range of employment/career
possibilities on offer in the region.
• The business
community — those who must identify current and future
employment needs and make those needs understood and
exciting to the region’s youth and to key enablers in the
community (and of course ultimately specialty train and
hire).
• Parents — who must choose to provide
nurture learning environments, help raise aspirations,
provide role models (or not).
• Other role models —
who can personify rewarding job paths and careers centered
right here in Hawke’s Bay.
• Young people — who
must voice their needs and exploit the learning and
communications tools and technologies that exist at their
fingertips.
• Maori leaders and whanau — whose role
is critical given the demographic surge ahead in our young
Maori population.
• Communicators — those in the
Bay who know how to use today’s online and mobile
technologies to connect sectors, to social market, and to
facilitate communication, exploration and learning within
the youth community itself.
• Central government —
a provider of data, working models and (at least) seed
funding.
• Local government — which can convene,
provide logistical and research support (and seed funding),
knock heads together, and negotiate with central government.
All these players must march together to the same
drum.
And no institution can make that collaboration happen for Hawke’s Bay better than our own local governments(s).
Of course, so long as we have five local governments, we can count on it taking at least three months to agree on the date for the first planning meeting, another three months for the meeting to occur, and then at least another year to negotiate the terms of of reference for the working party.
Hey, but what’s another year or two of falling all over each other, protecting patches, and bemoaning our fate? The kids can wait. They have nothing else to do. They’ll still be there when we adults are ready.
Tom
Belford