The Nation: Gower interviews Steven Joyce
On The Nation: Patrick Gower interviews Steven
Joyce
Youtube clips from the show are
available here.
Headlines:
Indian students may be deported over fraudulent visa applications, but Filipino dairy farm workers were allowed to apply to stay, but Steven Joyce denies there’s a double standard.
Joyce says he doesn’t know how many students could be in New Zealand fraudulently, but it could be hundreds.
NZQA says 11 Private Training Establishments are currently under investigation - Joyce says that isn’t unusual.
Joyce won’t rule out adjusting immigration targets in order to form a government with New Zealand First after the next election.
Patrick
Gower: International education — that’s foreign students
coming here to study. It is one of our biggest export
earners. A $3 billion — yes, a $3 billion — industry.
Our fifth biggest, just behind wood. It brings in more money
than wine or seafood. More money than them put together,
actually. And the government has said it wants it to get
even bigger, until it brings in $5 billion every year. But
there is an ugly side as well. Corruption and exploitation.
Steven Joyce is the tertiary education minister and also the
minister of economic development. He joins me now in the
studio. Now, Minister, I want to start with a case study —
a guy that I’ve been talking to. Pays a million rupees,
about $23,000, $17,000 in fees. Comes out to New Zealand,
arrives here, does his course, gets his job at Dominos,
working there, and then one day Immigration New Zealand
comes to him and says, ‘Hey, you came through a corrupt
agent. We’re deporting you.’ Now, whose fault is it? Is
it the student’s or is it our system that let him get all
the way out here?
Steven Joyce:
Ultimately, the responsibility is with the student. They
have to make a declaration that all the information that
they supplied to New Zealand is correct. They make that
declaration when they submit their visa applications, and,
yes, they get agents to advise them, but it is squarely and
clearly the responsibility of the student. Now, we obviously
want the agents to behave themselves well, and we know that
some agents haven’t been behaving themselves. So we’ve
tightened up the rules recently. We put in new requirements
in the code of practice that providers must be accountable
for their agent’s behaviour. But when it comes down to it,
it’s the student’s declaration that they’ve supplied
information that’s correct, which is what Immigration goes
on.
But what happens if these students, like
all of them tell us, all of them say it was the agent,
‘The agent tricked me’?
Well, of
course, with the greatest respect, you would say that.
There’s 125,000 students come to New Zealand every year.
Most of them come in the right way, do it the right way and
stay and have a successful time. Unfortunately there’s
always some, and the Indian market in
particular—
These ones that we’re not
stopping from India are all coming through the Mumbai
office. You know a lot about it, but for the people watching
out there, the amount of work that it does — 34,000
student visas processed there in the last 18 months; 17,000
granted. It’s huge.
It is very
significant.
And there are huge numbers of
corrupt agents pushing huge numbers of false students into
this country. How many do you think have got
in?
Well, actually, it’s a problem
everywhere in the Western world. So let’s start at the
beginning.
But—
No,
just give me a minute. Give me a minute, because I’ll just
give the background to it. India is now the biggest market
in the world for young people wanting to study offshore. The
Australians, the UK, the Canadians, the US, ourselves all
have challenges because of some of the corruption that
occurs in India. So the numbers you gave, I think, are quite
instructive, because what it says is about 40-odd per cent
of all visa applications are turned down because of the
risks that come with it. Now, Mumbai is a big office, but
actually, so is Beijing. So are some of the other offices
around the world that we work. Chinese market is the biggest
market, but there is some unique challenges to India, and
every country experiences those challenges. And so I look
along and say, ‘Are the New Zealand agencies doing as well
or better than their international comparatives?’ And the
answer is they’re having similar challenges which
they’re dealing with in similar ways.
Okay,
so now answer the question that we originally started with.
How many students with false visas do you think have come
into New Zealand in recent years?
We
don’t know the answer to that question, but what we do
know—
You should know. You should know,
shouldn’t you?
No, we don’t,
because that’s a bit like saying how many people have
committed crime that you don’t know
about?
No, it’s not. It’s about
saying—
People are being
fraudulent, by definition—
Could it be
hundreds? Could it be hundreds?
It
could be a few hundred, absolutely.
Could it
be over a thousand?
I literally
don’t know, Paddy, but what I do know is right now
there’s about 41 up for heading home at the
moment.
So we could have over a thousand,
maybe more?
Well, no, you were
looking for a headline. I’m not just going to guesstimate
on a headline.
I’m looking to assess
what’s happened to the integrity of our border through
student visas. It’s not a
headline.
No, you are looking for a
headline, and I can’t tell you an exact number, but what I
can tell you at the moment is there’s 41 students up for
deportation.
But you’ve said there could be
hundreds that are here.
No, you said
that. What I said to you—
No, you said there
could be a few hundred
What I said to
you is… The difficulty with fraud, of course, is somebody
is committing fraud so as not to be detected. So you can’t
just turn around and say, ‘Okay, well, I know exactly what
the number is.’ It’s a bit like saying, ‘How many
people are committing fraud in New Zealand society?’ We
don’t know the answer to that
question.
Because what we know about the
Mumbai area office from official documents, organised crime,
organised corruption coming through there. That’s from
documents.
And we do get that
periodically in different markets. 2012, we had the same
issue in China. We had to send 200-and-something students
home because their documents were fraudulent, and we do have
that from time to time. The vast bulk of the students coming
to New Zealand do it the right way, but we have to basically
investigate those that don’t do it the right way and have
to send some home.
Let’s look at what these
students are coming in for. Education, obviously. They pay
for that. But what we’re also giving them, aren’t we, is
the chance to work for 20 hours a week and full time in the
holidays.
Only if they’re at a
certain level of education, yeah.
And a
pathway to citizenship — a chance to stay here after their
year is up. So what is—?
No,
that’s not quite right, Paddy. If you study here for two
years at levels five or six or one year if you’re at level
seven or above, then you do get the opportunity to stay for
a graduate work visa. Just so you know. 80% go
home.
So, you know, there’s another 20% that
get to stay.
That’s
right.
And that’s the way it’s marketed in
India.
No, across the world, it’s
marketed as quality education, English language, great
experience, and, yes, for those that are interested in
working in New Zealand afterwards, there is that option if
you work.
Work and potentially
residence.
Potentially, and some do,
and they’re great, actually, because they’re intelligent
young people.
What are we selling, or what are
they buying? Are we selling them an education, or are we
selling them a chance to come here and work and a chance to
live here?
We’re selling them an
education. We’re selling them the opportunity to come and
be educated in New Zealand, and for nearly all of them,
that’s what their—
With all due respect,
that’s not what they tell us. When we talk to them, they
say the main things here are the chance to work and
live.
That’s why Immigration takes
a robust approach with those that apply, and nearly 40% of
them don’t get to come.
And on that, you
know, if we look back at what the big picture here — New
Zealand’s reputation in this industry that is so important
to us as well. When we look at organised corruption, fraud,
systematic fraud all coming through, you can’t even say
how many students have got here fraudulently. You don’t
even know. What’s it doing for our
reputation?
Well, actually, as I said
to you before, every English language country which operates
in India has these challenges. They can’t afford not to
operate there, because it is the biggest market of education
in the world, and it’s very important, and there’s some
very good students there. But if you talk to the Canadians,
you talk to the UK, you talk to the US, you talk to
Australia, they’ve all got the same challenges that we
have, and New Zealand is no more tarred by this than anybody
else. Everybody understands the challenge of this market.
Just go back to my point. The students have to make a
declaration that the information they’re supplying is
correct. If they don’t and it’s found out subsequently
to be not the case, our response is pretty robust and we
send them home.
On those students who sign
that declaration and are now being deported or under threat
of being deported, if they come back and say, ‘Okay, I did
sign it. It was the agent that did it,’ if they’re able
to prove to you that that’s the case, will you give them
an amnesty? Will you give them a chance to
stay?
No. No, that’s not what
we’ll do, and we have to be consistent and fair to
everybody. I’ve been asked about this. There’s 40-odd
students at the moment who are saying—
Yeah,
there’s going to be a lot more, by the sounds of
things.
Well, no, that’s what
they’re saying, but actually it is really important that
people follow the rules. Now, we, in 2012, we had, as I
said, about 200-and-something Chinese students. They also
would’ve said the same thing.
But if they
prove to you it was the agent—?
But
it’s not the agent.
If they say, ‘I was
let down by the agent. Mumbai area office ticked the box. I
got here. I paid my money. I’ve come here. I’ve done my
course. I’ve worked in my
job’?
That’s where you and they
are wrong, in that they are responsible for the information
that’s submitted, and if the information is submitted
fraudulently, then, actually, when they get caught up with,
they will have to go home.
So, you know,
you’re saying we’re wrong and we need to be consistent.
That’s the point here, isn’t
it?
Yeah.
Well, what
about the Filipinos? Okay, the Filipino workers that came in
fraudulently, they’ve been given a second chance to
stay.
This situation’s— There’s
a couple of things that are quite different there.
Firstly—
But they came in fraudulently. They
got to stay. What’s the
difference?
Let me go through as to
what’s different about that.
Because it’s
quite important, isn’t it? Because you’re talking about
consistency.
When you’re ready,
I’ll take you through it. The reality is that those cases,
when they were looked into, most of them had been found to
have embellished their CVs, but actually, they would’ve
qualified — most of them — to come here anyway if they
hadn’t done that, and many of them had been in New Zealand
working for a long period of time, they had long-standing
links to the region, so they were quite different. And the
Minister of Immigration makes those
decisions.
So it goes like this, doesn’t it?
One rule for the Filipinos on the National-voting dairy
farms. And another rule for the expendable Indian
students.
No, no, no, no,
no.
That’s your— That’s your
consistency.
No, that’s absolutely
wrong.
The Indian students aren’t worth
anything.
No, that’s not correct.
As you’ve just pointed out—
They go home
— no refund, no nothing. Filipino farmer down in Dipton
gets a chance because he’s mates with the National
Party.
No, that’s not correct. But
my point is you said at the outset you’ve got to be
careful that we don’t risk what is a very important
industry for New Zealand and it has to have clear rules, and
I, as the minister responsible for it, am absolutely clear
that if people don’t meet those rules, then, I’m sorry,
and if they’ve been fraudulently coming to New Zealand,
they’ve been making declarations— Because, don’t
forget, this stuff is actually for their welfare. So what do
we actually ask them for?
So no
amnesty.
What do we ask them for? We
ask them for English language skills that allow them to
participate in New Zealand, and we ask them to bring enough
money so that—
And official documentation
shows their agents put imposters in to do the tests, and you
guys let them in here.
Hang on a
second. And the second this is is that they must bring
enough money to New Zealand to be able to support themselves
so they don’t risk exploitation. These are things for
their benefit.
Which their family get loans
for, and then if they get kicked out, they get no refund.
We’ll move on, though, because look at this IANZ — one
of the providers, one of the private training educators.
That’s sold up and closed down while it’s been under
investigation.
That’s
right.
Is anyone going to be held
responsible?
Yes. There’s continued
investigations around that particular— I can’t go into
the details of that. That particular operator has a long
history, long before you guys actually showed interest in
it, to be fair, back to 2014, where they have been having
arguments that have ended in court over the quality of their
external evaluations.
Investigations continue
there, and someone will be held to
account?
Investigations continue.
It’s ultimately up to NZQA. I don’t get to make those
decisions.
NZQA have told us yesterday 11
private training enterprises are under investigation since
July last year.
There’s always a
whole lot. We do about 30 to 40 a year. There’s something
like 600 providers internationally, including schools and
PTEs and universities and ITPs. We always have a number
under investigation.
The point here, Minister,
is we’ve got problems, haven’t we, with this? We’ve
got 11 private training enterprises under investigation
here. We’ve got corruption.
We
always have that many, Paddy. We always have that many.
There’s always things that are going on which we would all
prefer not to—
So there’s always
problems?
There’s always a period
of— Yep, there’s always people who are taking it over
the line and they shouldn’t be, and we have a pretty
robust process which they get investigated, and there has
been plenty in the last four or five years where they’ve
been told, ‘You will not be bringing any students into New
Zealand any more, because you’ve
misbehaved.’
Will we see more of these
investigations and sanctions in the coming weeks and
months?
You’ll see a continued
amount that continues over the year ahead, not just in the
international space, but also on the domestic space. What
we’ve taken is an approach where we’ve been toughening
up with all the providers, because we want to keep lifting
the standard of quality. And so, for example, now the point
you made earlier, providers are expressly responsible for
the behaviour of their agents in the market. And that’s
from the 1st of July this year. That may well have
repercussions.
Okay, so I want to move to
immigration more broadly. Are the numbers coming into the
country right now, is it right? Have you got the number
coming in and the mix right when it comes to
immigration?
That’s primarily a
matter for Michael Woodhouse, but from an economic
development perspective, I’d say broadly correct. We keep
tweaking them. It’s hard to get exactly the perfect number
at all times. But if you look at, wearing my employment hat,
unemployment coming down, city like Auckland, 4.7%
unemployment.
You think you’ve got the
number right and the mix
right?
Broadly, because what we’re
looking for are certain skills around the country. There’s
plenty of people who will raise the issue and say, ‘Oh,
you know, why are we bringing in a baker,’ or whatever.
But actually, in different parts of the country, we have
very low levels of unemployment, and actually, those people
help fill those gaps because people aren’t prepared to do
them.
Because I want to read you a list about
immigration here.
Yeah,
sure.
The Reserve Bank, the head of
ANZ David Hisco, Michael Barnett from the Chamber of
Commerce, first-home buyers, principals in Auckland,
who’ll tell you their classrooms are bursting, Judith
Collins, your police minister who blamed a rise in crime on
a rise in population this week.
The
population is rising.
60% of people in the
Newshub poll who said immigration needs to slow down. All
these people think that you and your government have got it
wrong. So are they wrong on immigration, or are
you?
There’s a reason why New
Zealand is growing strongly, and one of the biggest—
There’s a number of reasons why New Zealand is growing
strongly and one of the strongest growing economies in the
OECD right now. And that is because our companies are
growing, they’re adding more people, they’re having the
opportunity to bring in skilled workers if there’s not
enough of them here, and that’s helping New Zealand grow,
and it’s helping us add something like 375,000 jobs, or
15% of our total number of jobs, since the GFC. So my point
is you can’t just sort of say, ‘Well, okay, we’ll pick
that part of the recipe out and say we’ll get rid of that,
we’ll get rid of this, we’ll get rid of that and hope to
be growing strongly.’
But you can still be
successful without bringing in 72,000 foreign immigrants a
year.
But hang on. A) it’s about
68,000, but anyway, a lot of those go
away.
No, that’s net migration. 72,000
foreign immigrants came in—
But my
point is, firstly, a significant number of those are
international students, and 80% of
those—
That’s going
well.
And 80% of those— Yeah, that
is going very well, thank you. $3.5 billion. 30-something
thousand jobs—
The question is — at what
point is it too
many?