Showing posts with label Emigration. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Emigration. Show all posts

Tuesday, 7 April 2026

1 in 4 people born in New Zealand live elsewhere by age 30

Some fascinating research by Tim Hughes and his team at Treasury reveals that "25-30% of people born in New Zealand are living elsewhere by age 30."

We find that only about a third of emigration each year is of the NZ-born, and about 40% of NZ-born emigrants return to live in NZ again. Those with the highest qualifications are most likely to leave but also the most likely to return. Those who return earn more and pay more tax than those never to leave.
    Yet much emigration is permanent and the diaspora is still substantial, with 25-30% of each birth cohort living elsewhere by age 30. Approximately $4b of public investment in human capital [sic] each year is ultimately lost to emigration, needing to be replaced with migration from other countries.

Complementary research further reveals that this "human capital [sic] is replaced via migration of people born elsewhere. 

Foreign-born residents contribute a disproportionate share of personal tax revenue, reflecting their age structure and other factors.
    In 2024, foreign-born NZ residents made up 32% of the population, and paid 38% of the personal tax.
    This analysis helps demonstrate the growing importance of migration policy settings for fiscal sustainability.

[hat tip Eric Crampton]

Tuesday, 25 March 2025

"Kiwi Exodus"

The Economist has discovered all is not well down here in this sleepy authoritarian backwater.

From afar [says 'The Economist''s promo], New Zealand always seemed like an ideal destination. Beautiful nature, friendly people, relatively sane politics. And if you’re a fan of Tolkien, you can visit the film home of Bilbo Baggins.

But New Zealanders are leaving their country in record numbers. Almost 129,000 residents emigrated last year—40% above the pre-pandemic average for this century. Holy Shire, what’s going on?! Our report looks at why Kiwis are moving out, where they are going and how their government may struggle to reverse the trend.
It's not so much a "report," however. More just a few pessimistic paragraphs under the heading 'Kiwi Exodus' riffing on the failure of a lacklustre National Government to stop the rot...

New Zealanders ... are leaving their country in record numbers. Almost 129,000 residents emigrated last year—40% above the pre-pandemic average for this century. It is not a case of last in, first out. The majority of those leaving were New Zealanders, rather than immigrants returning home, creating a net loss of 47,000 citizens. ...

Its small economy and relative lack of opportunity have long driven young New Zealanders towards what they call the 'overseas experience,' fanning fears of brain drain. Proportionate to its population of 5.3m, it has one of the largest diasporas in the OECD ...

Recently, New Zealand has been in a rut. The economy is in recession and unemployment has risen. Outgoing Kiwis grumble about costly housing and a crime surge.
 
Unlike most, they have an alternative when times get tough: they are free to live and work in Australia, and vice versa. Almost 15% of them are now based across the ditch”. It is not just that Australia’s economy has weathered the cost-of-living crisis better. The income gap between the pair has been growing for decades. Adjusted for purchasing power, Australia’s per person GDP is about a third higher than New Zealand’s. Its pensions are more generous, and its centre-left Labor government has made it easier for Kiwis to get passports and benefits. By comparison, New Zealand is 'a sinking boat,' says one transplant on a Facebook group for Kiwi expats. Australia is 'best for [an] easy life,' writes another.

In the past, fears of brain drain have proved overblown. Young expats have generally returned, and governments have offset losses by letting in immigrants from countries such as India and China. The result was a 'brain exchange,' says Paul Spoonley, a sociologist at New Zealand’s Massey University. But there is a risk of that changing, he argues. First, he says, it is no longer just young New Zealanders who are leaving, but more experienced professionals and extended families. Second, inward immigration is now slowing. After a post-pandemic spike, it plunged by around a third last year, though the population is still growing. Christopher Luxon, the prime minister, says the solution is 'to build a long-term proposition where New Zealanders actually choose to stay.' But that has not proved easy. In 2009 John Key, then prime minister, set out to 'match Australia by 2025.' In Wellington, the capital, some now joke that a more realistic goal would be to 'beat Fiji by 2050.'

Tuesday, 14 December 2021

Emigration again?


“My view [says economist Tony Alexander*] is when the borders open a generation of young Kiwis will depart our shores for Australia for the higher wages on offer and lower cost of living, and to embrace some freedom after two years being locked up.”

Discuss.

* Hat tip Bob Jones.