Royal Society looks beyond census data to NZ's future
Royal Society of New Zealand looks beyond census data to New Zealand’s future
The Royal Society of New Zealand
sees a future where multiple ‘national’ identities
exist, we face an ageing but increasingly active older
population, and a relatively large and youthful Māori and
Pasifika population offers a ‘demographic dividend’.
New Zealand is also likely to face population growth that is entirely dependent on immigration and susceptible to unforeseen surges, continued growth in Auckland, and challenges for rural areas in maintaining service levels for an aging and possibly dwindling population.
Our Futures: Te Pae Tāwhiti, released today by an expert panel of the Royal Society of New Zealand, brings together data and analysis from the 2013 census and other sources, together with input from a wide range of researchers, to provide some evidence-based pointers to the future of New Zealand society.
Professor Gary Hawke, chair of the panel, says the review is unique in that it is multi-disciplinary and focused on the big picture.
“We wanted to highlight what an evolving New Zealand society might look like, what is underlying these changes, and the challenges and opportunities these present.”
The panel identified seven key themes from the census
data and analyses—diversity, population growth, tangata
whenua, migration, households and families, regional
variation
and work—around which Our Futures: Te Pae
Tāwhiti is structured.
Professor Hawke says that the review did not result in sweeping predictions for the future, but offered comment on trends and implications based on what we know today and the pressures for change.
“What we have brought together should enable a more informed approach to both policy debate and political discussion.”
In his foreword, Sir David Skegg, President of the Royal Society of New Zealand, says he believes the report will be of interest to anyone who cares about the future of New Zealand.
“I would love to see it in the hands (or on the screens) not only of decision-makers but also of the Year 13 students who will be our future leaders.”
Our Futures: Te Pae Tāwhiti is available to download at http://www.royalsociety.org.nz/our-futures
The paper was authored by a Royal Society of New Zealand panel chaired by Professor Gary Hawke FRSNZ. The panel members were: Professor Richard Bedford QSO FRSNZ, Dr Tahu Kukutai, Dr Malcolm McKinnon, Professor Erik Olssen FRSNZ and Professor Paul Spoonley FRSNZ.
Summary from Our Futures: Te
Pae Tāwhiti, The 2013 Census and New Zealand's changing
population
“Ko te pae tata, whakamaua, kia tīnā, Ko te pae tāwhiti, whaia, kia tata” – “Secure the horizons that are close to hand and pursue the more distant horizons so that they may become close”
Diversity
· New Zealand has always had
minority communities – both ethnic and religious – but
in the last twenty years, the country has become diverse in
new ways: increasing migration from Asia and an increasing
proportion of the population born overseas.
·
The implication for New Zealand is that it is, increasingly,
a country with multiple cultural identities and values.
Population change
· People are living and
staying active longer, and the proportion of the population
in the older age groups will increase.
· The
implications for New Zealand are that people will need
income for longer, and keeping the birth rate above
replacement level will be a challenge.
Tangata whenua
· Māori have a distinctive but rapidly
changing population structure with significant assets, as
well as labour.
· Māori culture and
institutions continue to endure and evolve along with
demographic change, but the maintenance of Te Reo Māori
faces challenges.
Migration
· New
Zealand’s population is the product of two
long-established migration flows: immigration and
circulation of citizens of other countries, and emigration
and circulation of New Zealanders.
· The
implications for New Zealand could include immigration
surges from the diaspora, such as the 650,000 New Zealanders
who live in Australia, and from the 23 million Australians
that have right of access to the New Zealand labour market
and welfare. The contribution migration makes to population
growth is likely to increase, relative to that from natural
increase from the mid-2030’s as the gap between births and
deaths continues to shrink with rising numbers of deaths and
falling birth rates.
Households and families
·
Household patterns have changed little in the 21st
century.
· There has been a rise in two-family
households, and many children live in households which have
limited income and assets.
Regional variation
·
New Zealand is regionally diverse and interconnected, with
Auckland accounting for over half the population growth
between 2006 and 2013. Internal migration has decelerated
between regions.
· The implication for New
Zealand is a pattern of greater relative growth for
Auckland, a few centres with slower growth, and population
decline in much of rural New Zealand, with implications for
maintaining service levels for an ageing and possibly
dwindling population.
Work
· Employment
is shifting in terms of location and the rise and fall of
occupations and industries. This has been accompanied by
changes in labour supply, resulting in part from the ageing
of the population, the contraction in entry level cohorts
and the reliance on immigrant labour.
· The
implications for New Zealand are that the growing diversity
of the nature of paid employment will continue, so that
there will be less security and participation will be more
precarious.
ends