Wanted 20,000 workers Recruitment crisis on boomer exodus

Released on: June 3, 2008, 1:14 am

Press Release Author: - John Thistleton, The Canberra Times

Industry: Internet & Online

Press Release Summary: The estimated shortage of 10,000 workers across the ACT could
double over the next three years when large numbers of baby boomers retire.

Press Release Body: The estimated shortage of 10,000 workers across the ACT could
double over the next three years when large numbers of baby boomers retire.

Public service job cutbacks in Tuesday week\'s Federal budget, tipped to cost
Canberra up to 3000 positions, is likely to have little impact on the capital\'s
worsening skills drought.

Today, The Canberra Times begins a three-part series on the extent of the ACT skills
drought, which is worse here than anywhere else in Australia, and what could be done
to fix it.

ACT Chamber of Commerce chief executive Chris Peters said business growth in the
territory had been stalled for 18 months due to insufficient workers.

\"About two years ago staff shortages were No13 on businesses lists of concerns. It\'s
been No1 for about 18 months, so it is the major impediment to business growth.\"

The ACT Skills Commission and the chamber\'s research shows the ACT will continue to
be hardest hit of all Australian states and territories from a shortage of skilled
and unskilled workers.
Access Economics research shows the ACT\'s population is biased towards the 45 to 59
age group.

The demographics report compiled for the Skills Commission says the retirement
timing of this age group and especially those aged 50 to 54 will have an even
greater impact on the ACT workforce than it will nationally.

Access Economics expects increasing labour force participation rates up to 2010,
with a reversal of that trend from 2010 to 2015 and a sharp reduction in
participation after then because the main part of the baby boom generation will have
reached the age of 65.

ACT Skills Commission chairman Derek Volker warns that today\'s delays will become
tomorrow\'s disaster when too few people are available to look after elderly folk.

\"It is not a skills problem, it\'s more a people problem and if we don\'t do something
about it, it could turn into a crisis not too far down the track.\"

Home Help Service ACT, a not-for-profit organisation that provides in-home support
to the elderly and frail aged, could place 20 people immediately in its stretched
ranks of carers.

Canberra employers scouring the country and overseas for employees are competing
with the remainder of the western world which is suffering a skills drought.

Mr Peters said three factors contributed to the territory\'s exceptional worker
shortage:
Having both the lowest unemployment (2.4 per cent) and highest participation rates
in Australia, which meant there weren\'t too many stay-at-home mothers, or
unemployed, to fill job vacancies; The ACT and Adelaide had Australia\'s two fastest
aging populations; and Older public servants in a former superannuation scheme had
to retire before 55 to maximise their superannuation benefits.

\"Canberra has the highest percentage of public servants than anywhere in Australia
and they retire a decade earlier than the rest of Australia.\" Mr Peters said Federal
budget cuts in two weeks were expected to cause a net loss of 1000 people from the
Commonwealth Public Service.
At best those leaving would have wide-ranging expertise.

\"It depends on what the mix is I expect the mix will be fairly broad, which would be
widely welcomed by the business community, but all of those won\'t solve our
problem.\"

Shortages are in all sectors, from engineering, health, trades, services and
construction.
Multinational construction company Bovis Lend Lease said employers were competing
with unprecedented building in the booming Middle East countries, and project
directors could command salaries of up to $300,000.

Hays senior regional director for Canberra Jane Donnelly said financial controllers
and managers on salaries of up to $100,000 and $130,000 were in demand following the
meltdown of global financial markets last year.

\"Within the banking sector they are far more aware of the risk associated with
certain products, they are seeking people with extensive risk analyst-type skills.\"

Mr Peters said the shortage meant people were finding the service in places like
restaurants, hairdressing salons and workshops slower. \"If you have an accident
driving home tonight in your car, typically your car will sit on the panel beaters
shop floor for two weeks until they can get to it. That\'s now. In three years time
that [timeframe] will double.\"

- John Thistleton, The Canberra Times

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