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November 25, 2022

Skills in high demand

Partly extracted from Sydney Morning Herald

Surging demand for labour has deepened the shortage of skilled workers across 286 occupations ranging from chemical engineers to abattoir workers, in a new finding that will intensify calls for more investment in skills policy when federal and state ministers meet on Friday.

The list of skills shortages has increased to 31 per cent of occupations assessed by federal authorities to guide employment policy, up from 19 per cent of job types one year ago.

With employers advertising 301,000 job vacancies in August, up by 37 per cent on the same month last year, the labour shortage is turning into a pressure point in the October 25 budget when the federal government is trying to negotiate a funding deal with the states.

“The staggering jump in occupations listed reinforces the urgent need to tackle skills shortages,” said Skills Minister Brendan O’Connor ahead of the release of the new figures from the National Skills Commission.

The most in-demand jobs include Aged and Disability carers, child carers, retail managers, chefs, ICT business and system analysts, registered nurses, cooks and civil engineers. Most of these occupations however require the qualification to be equivalent to that of Australian skills and qualifications. As a result, in many cases gaining these qualifications in Australia or through an Australian education institute will assist in positive skills assessment.

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