On Newshub Nation: Simon Shepherd Interviews Professor Paul Spoonley
Simon Shepherd: This year, New Zealand's
population is forecast to exceed five million for the first
time. Massey University's Professor Paul Spoonley has
researched demographic issues, migration, and social policy
for decades. He says we should take lessons on immigration
from countries that do it well. I began by asking him
whether - in an election year - it's possible to have any
discussion about immigration without it becoming
racist.
Paul Spoonley: No. No, I don’t
think so because as soon as you get to the, sort of,
generalities that Shane’s involved in at the moment, then
you’re beginning to be racist in whatever way, shape or
form. So I think it’s very very difficult, and I certainly
would appreciate a genuine discussion about immigration
because it’s complex and it’s very important to this
country. But, of course, once politicians get near it, no,
I’m afraid it gets very murky very
quickly.
Speaking of Shane Jones, on the
programme last week he talked about proposing a maximum
population policy. What is a maximum population
policy?
Well, I agree with the population
policy because at the moment, our immigration policy is our
population policy and it’s much more complex than that.
So, we’ve got dropping fertility, we’ve got an ageing
population. Migration is the major source of population
growth for this country, and we’ve been growing quite
fast. In the OECD, we’ve been one of the fastest growing
countries because of our immigration.
Okay. In
terms of a maximum population policy, I mean, there’s
predictions that we’re going to hit 5 million population
this year and Auckland’s going to hit 2 million. It’s
not about just putting a cap, saying no more than 5 million,
is it?
No, it’s not. No, no, no. No,
it’s not. So, one of the issues around that is that at 2
million, 40 per cent of all New Zealanders would live in
Auckland. Is that something that we really want? And do we
want to see the, sort of, West Coast of the South Island,
which is already in population decline, continue to decline
in population terms? So I think it’s really around where
the growth is, who’s contributing to that growth, the sort
of migrants that we need for our economy but also for our
society.
Okay. First of all, one of the claims
is that – and Jones has done this – is they sheeted a
lot of our infrastructure problems back to the growth in
immigrants. Is that fair?
I think
it’s—In part, it is fair because what you’re seeing is
migration growth here which is quite substantial. Just to
give you one figure. Between 2013 and 2018, we had a net
gain of 260,000 from migration. That’s huge. We’ve never
seen it before in our history and it’s unusual in terms of
the OECD. So that growth, that population growth from
migration has certainly contributed to demand, but then I
think it’s much more complex than that. I think
historically we’ve had a deficit in terms of
infrastructure. Transport—
So you can’t
just purely sheet it back--?
No,
no.
Okay. All right.
That
would be very unfair because what’s ironic is that not
only do those migrants contribute to demand but also
they’re an important part of workforce building the
infrastructure.
Okay, but does that point back
to Labour’s promise last election to cut migration by,
say, up to 30,000? That seems to have disappeared as an
official target, but what are they doing behind the scenes?
Are they actually working towards that?
Yes,
well, I think they’ve been a little deceitful there
because, in effect, they’ve dropped the number of
residencies they’re approving each year and that is
dropping the net gain for migration. So if you look at the
migration figures, they set a target of 20,000 to 30,000.
They’re not going to reach the 20,000, but they’re
certainly going to have dropped the numbers of permanent
residents arriving here in this country down
considerably.
Because net migration’s
running about 44,000 now down from highs of 60,000 or
70,000.
Yes, indeed.
Okay, but
is the government still trying to keep enough of those
migrants coming in to keep the economy looking healthy and
keep the country growing? I mean, that’s the balance, is
it?
It is the balance. There’s a sweet
spot there about the numbers coming in and meeting
particularly our labour and skill demands. So it’s quite
an interesting, quite complex area.
Do you
know what that sweet spot is?
Well,
yes.
You do? You should tell
Labour.
I think Australia and Canada set
their target at about one per cent of their population,
which I don’t think is a bad target. That’s net
migration gain per year.
And we don’t have
that target, though, do we?
No, we don’t,
but at 44,000, we’re below, because typically it would be
around that 50,000 net gain.
So Labour’s
doing these surreptitious things behind the scenes to reduce
the migration. We’ve just seen a story of a family who’s
caught in limbo because of these changes in policies.
They’re no longer a priority. They don’t know whether
they’re going to get residency here. Is that fair? Have
the goalposts been moved without people
knowing?
No, I don’t think it is. I mean,
I think one of the things that makes us attractive is that
when people come here on temporary work or study visas, they
get a chance to transition to permanent residents. That’s
very very attractive. That’s what
makes—
And have we been selling
that?
Well, we have been selling that, and
I’m in the tertiary sector and that’s been an important
part of our attraction for international students. So what I
think the government has done has increased the temporary
workforce quite considerably but then reduced the number of
residencies, so that transition from a temporary work visa
to permanent resident has been reduced over the last two
years.
Is that creating a Dubai of the South
Pacific kind of arrangement where we have temporary, cheaper
labour?
Uh, yes, it is. The Dubai example is
an interesting one. I don’t think we’re as bad as Dubai.
I think there are much more explicit rules and procedures
around the temporary work visas here, but what I do think it
is is it’s producing a lot of frustration because the
backlog of people applying for residency and not getting it
has tripled over the last year.
Does that mean
we’re going to see those people leave if they can’t get
their residency?
Well, they’ll have to
leave. I mean, the rules are that if they don’t meet the
requirements, for example, double the median income – so
$106,000 salary – in order to qualify… I mean, that’s
a huge ask, so I think some of the rules are making it very
difficult for the temporary migrants to get approval to
stay.
Okay. From research that you’ve done
– and I’m looking toward the March 15 anniversary here
– but what role do immigration settings have on breeding
or preventing extremism in a country?
A lot,
really, because if you’re bringing in migrants who are
creating anxiety, then at the fringe of that, you’re
getting people who are radicalising the message about the
Great Replacement, which is one of the key messages of the
far right, and that is that somehow we, the host population,
the white population, the Pakeha population, is being
outnumbered by people who are not of our culture, not of our
ethnicity, not of our religion. And so that produces not
only a generalised anxiety; it also produces a fringe who
are prepared to act on that.
That fringe
isn’t based on fact because research out this week shows
one in three New Zealanders were probably born overseas
already.
Indeed. So, we’ve got one of the
highest proportions of overseas born, and of course, we are
being interviewed in a city which is regarded as the fourth
most diverse city in the world. So I think we should be
careful because over the past few decades, we’ve seen this
increase in diversity without some of the conflict and the
anti-immigrant politics that we’ve seen in other
countries. But I don’t think we should be
complacent.
Okay. Do you think that the
government is going to address this? Can we expect any
change in policy?
Yes, I think they will,
and they’re going to do it in various ways. I mean, one of
those is to look at the hate speech regulations, so
expanding the protected characteristics. The other is to
introduce a policy around social
inclusion.
What does that
mean?
It really identifies who we should be
doing onshore. So the migrants have arrived here, they’re
part of our community. What should we be doing to help them
settle here and what should we be doing to reduce any
anxieties from the host population? So it’s really a
partnership between the new arrivals and the people that are
here and making sure that all our systems are
working.
Okay, so a big debate to be had in an
election year. Can you point us to one country where this
system is actually working?
I would point to
Canada. I think that Canada does a lot of this really well,
and some of the things we need to look at is what do the
Canadians do post-arrival to help them? So, for example,
they give them so many hours’ English language
instruction. What are they doing to distribute migrants
around the country? What are they doing to help Canadians
understand that diversity and migration are really important
to Canada’s success? So we should be doing all of those
things.
Paul Spoonley, thank you very much for
your time today.
Thank you,
Simon.
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