Life in Australia

Entries from May 2008

Over 100 Kiwis pack up for Australia daily

May 13, 2008 · Leave a Comment

A net 1,009 New Zealand residents emigrated in March 2008 to Australia in what has become popularly known as Cross the Ditch or Trans Tasman migration. While it is a good trend from inflation point of view in New Zealand as it brings downward pressure on sales, NZ authorities are not happy with the trend as they see it has brain drain.

According to stats, 106 New Zealanders left each day for Australia in the last year, while 121 left each day in March 2008, being the highest average rate of emigration to Australia since 2001. The biggest individual source of migrants to Australia has been Britain with 6,894 in the year to March 2008, down from 10,235 the previous year. The next biggest contributor has been India with 4,159, almost double the 2,536 the previous year. The Philippines was also a big mover, increasing to 3,262 from 2,714 the previous year. South African net migration increased to 2,129 from 1,597.

One read a great deal about the inherent rivalries between the Kiwis and Australians in exactly the same way as English and French or Indians and Pakistanis. One wonders how the Australians feel about such large of Kiwis entering their country, obviously for economic reasons, and how welcomed or unwelcomed the Kiwis feel in their new home across the ditch.  Their experiences must make interesting read. Comments and thoughts are welcome on such experiences and also what type of professioanals or people tend to migrate from NZ the most.

Categories: Migration · Miscelleanous
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Kiwi migration to Australia continues to Rise

May 13, 2008 · Leave a Comment

The numbers of New Zealanders leaving their country to live in Australia continued to rise in March 2008, while the number of Australians visiting here short term was also up.

Figures published today by Statistics New Zealand (SNZ) show that a net outflow of 3100 permanent and long term (PLT) migrants left this country for Australia in March, up from 2800 in March 2007.

The 83,500 PLT arrivals in the year to the end of March was up 1000 from the March 2007 year, while the 78,800 PLT departures was up 8400.

The resulting 4700 net migration was down from 12,100 in the March 2007 year, SNZ said.

The net PLT outflow of 29,900 to Australia in the March 2008 year was the highest net outflow to Australia since the July 2001 year. It compared with 23,300 in the March 2007 year.

A net inflow of 6900 migrants came from Britain in the year to the end of March, down from 10,200 the previous year, while net PLT inflows in the latest year also came from India (4200), the Philippines (3300), Fiji (2500), South Africa (2100), China (1900) and Germany (1600).

Meanwhile, the 250,800 short term overseas visitor arrivals last month were up 11,600, or 5 per cent, on March 2007.

Seasonally adjusted visitor arrivals were steady between February and March, following an increase of 5 per cent between January and February, SNZ said.

The number of visitors from Australia was up by 6700, or 8 per cent, last month compared with March 2007, helped by the earlier timing of the Easter holidays.

Visitor numbers from Britain were up by 2800 or 8 per cent, from China up by 1800 or 20 per cent and from the United States up by 1400 or 6 per cent.

Cruise passengers accounted for most of the increase from the US, and together with new air services between Vancouver and Auckland contributed to 900, or 16 per cent, more visitor arrivals from Canada, SNZ said.

Visitor arrivals from Korea were down 3000 or 31 per cent, and from Japan down 1300 or 10 per cent.

For the year to the end of March 2008, 2.5 million visitors arrived, up 51,900 or 2 per cent from the March 2007 year.

Visitors from Australia were up 56,500 or 6 per cent for the year, while numbers from China rose 10,000 or 9 per cent, and from Canada were up 5200 or 11 per cent.

Numbers from Korea were down 19,800 or 18 per cent for the year, with those from Japan down 13,600 or 10 per cent, and from Britain down 9600 or 3 per cent.

Source: http://www.stuff.co.nz/4490614a13.html

Categories: Migration
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This is why I moved to Australia (From South Africa)

May 13, 2008 · 2 Comments

This is an interesting article by a South African lady on her motivations to move to Australia. I thought I would share it with the readers of this blog.

I never thought I would say this.

In fact, there was a time when I regarded anyone who moved to Australia as a traitor, and quite possibly racist. The sort of person South Africa would be better off without, as Pallo Jordan might say. When JM Coetzee moved to Australia and learned how to smile, I felt personally affronted. I never met the man, but he was one of ours and he had betrayed us. That Nobel prize was earned off writing about our horrible history, not theirs.

The truth is that at the beginning of the month, I climbed aboard a Qantas flight to Australia — on a one way ticket.*

Oh, I am not going to talk about the E-word. Emigration is too final, too loaded — too redolent of bitter Castle Lager-fuelled conversations standing around the braai. It reminds me too much of the fabled chicken run of the early 1990s and beyond, the people to whom the usually conciliatory Nelson Mandela said “Those who have not got the courage and the patriotism to remain in their country, let them go! It is good riddance!”

My reasons for leaving South Africa for Australia are both complex and obvious, generic and personal. As they are, perhaps, for most of those South Africans who leave.

For a start, I was offered a great job, one to which I could not say no. I get to work on one of Australia’s biggest advertisers, in one of its biggest and most successful advertising agencies, with a friend I have always liked and respected. I never did take the gap year or do the London stint in my twenties, like so many other South Africans of my generation. I’ve felt for some time now that I have missed out, that I need to experience working in a different country, a different culture.

Johannesburg had become such a comfort zone, its roads rutted by memory. Even the ambient fear had become oddly comforting in its familiarity, in the rituals of panic button, locking doors, checking the street for lurkers as I approach my garage and scrabble in the dark for the opener. If I did not make the leap now, as I remind myself that in a couple of years’ time my biological clock is going to start screaming for attention, then when?

Of course, there are the attractions of living and working in a country that is for the most part without the constant possibility of personal harm; I won’t lie about that. There’s the usual whinge about Eskom and Jacob Zuma yada yada, but for me it’s the relative freedom that is a huge attraction. That, and the chance, not only to step outside of the familiar, but to enjoy an element of anonymity. I like the idea of being an observer for a while, rather than a participant.

Why write about all of this on a platform like Thoughtleader? Well, I have long been interested in the relationship between South Africa and Australia, and how both have addressed the task of nation-building in an era where nationality no longer equals ethnicity. Both are addressing the challenge of multicultural societies, albeit in different ways and under different circumstances.

Then there is the fact that Australia is regarded by so many South Africans with an awkward mixture of jealousy and resentment. If I were moving to London, nobody would bat an eyelid. But Australia — Australia is too similar to South Africa, too much an example of what might have been if … who knows? As I wrote in my first book of South African insults,

The South African rivalry with Australia is to be expected. Like us, they’re an ex-British colony, although, unlike us, they can’t get over their fetish for old women wearing crowns. They play the same sports as us, at which they beat us soundly and repeatedly. In the family of those nations that once saluted the Union Jack, Australia is the golden-haired, blue-eyed sibling who wins all the sporting and academic awards at school and can do no wrong. Meanwhile, bolshy and resentful, South Africa — the black sheep of the family — loiters in dark alleyways, dragging on a joint and scratching listlessly at a mildly Satanic tattoo.

In the weeks and months ahead, I plan to reflect on this rivalry — which is, for the most past, hopelessly one-sided — and the ways in which South Africa and Australia are similar and different. Compare and contrast, you might call it. It’s a subject that receives relatively little coverage, and those column centimetres it does score seem to laden with an overt agenda: proving the disloyalty of expats, or the ineptness of an ANC government.

I’d like to write about moving to Australia with a little less aggrieved patriotism, perhaps a little more dispassion. After all, if JM Coetzee can learn to smile for the cameras, anything is possible.

*Mainly because if you get the International Organization for Migration to book a one way ticket for you, you get a 40kg luggage allowance, which can come in handy when transporting a winter wardrobe.

Source: http://www.thoughtleader.co.za/sarahbritten/2008/05/12/this-is-why-i-have-moved-to-australia/

Categories: Cost of Living · Earnings & Income · Education · Jobs & Employment · Migration · Miscelleanous · Professionals · Property and Mortgages · Small Business · Travel
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Dodgy Migration Agents Under Scrutiny

May 13, 2008 · Leave a Comment

Increasingly fake or dubious characters are trying to rip off innocent people for migration to Australia. This trend is particularly common in relatively poor countries where laws for the control of such illegal acts, or at least their implementation, is weak or non existent.  Many such shifty characters successfully manage to get their paying clients to Australia but only for the trouble to begin afterwards. Recently, the Australian migration department detained 12 illegal immigrants during a two-night operation and arrested four Indian men and an Indian woman as well as a Pakistani man. The officers also raided an area occupied by migrants and after interviewing 50 people, made six arrests – three men and three women, all from India. All were proved to be illegal migrants and are being currently held at Villawood Detention Centre in Sydney where they are awaiting deportation.

Employers convicted of using illegal labour face fines of up to $13,200 and two year’s jail. Similarly, the penalty for companies is up to $66,000 per illegal worker.

One wonders when Australia has one of the best and fast track system of legal migration of skilled workers, why is that people, instead of following the legal route, opt for the illegal route. Do they do it deliberately or are they simple victims of deception and cheating by the dodgy so-called migration agents ? Anyway, the immigration department is carrying out a thorough investigation on the source of these illegal migrants and workers in the country and sooner rather than later, the guilty characters will be revealed to the authorities for their further action. One however wonders exactly what measures can the Australian authorities where such con artists emerge every day to rip off the innocents, make their dosh and disappear into thin air – perhaps only to reappear elsewhere with another scam. The ones who suffer are the victims of their scam – innocent people who are illegaly migrated to Australia and many other developed countries.

Categories: Migration · Miscelleanous · Professionals
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