Subject: Skilled migration and Global Talent Independent program
E&OE............................................
Good afternoon ladies and gentlemen, it is great to be here with you all today. I would
like to thank April Palmerlee and the American Chamber of Commerce in Australia for
their kind invitation.
I would also like to acknowledge Michelle Simmons – Director of the ARC Centre if
Excellence former 2018 Australian of the Year.
Well, it is an immense privilege to be Australia’s Immigration Minister.
Immigration has grown our economy, broadened our horizons, and reduced the impact
of our geographic isolation.
In every town, every suburb, every sporting club, every church in our nation we see
immigration success stories.
More than seven million people have immigrated to Australia since the Second World
War and the vast majority have worked hard, played by the rules, and helped build a
better Australia.
Skilled migration is the bedrock of our immigration system.
Australia has had a long and outstanding Skilled Migration Program that has
successfully attracted skilled migrants from around the world. Skilled migration
currently accounts for 70 per cent of our migration program.
Skilled migrants add value to Australian businesses, they contribute to building skills
locally, and they generate significant tax revenue. Many skilled migrants start their own
companies, and create new opportunities for Australian workers. In fact, about one in
three small businesses in Australia is operated by a migrant.
Skilled migrants contribute significantly to increased productivity and higher standards
of living.
And it stands to reason that the more skilled a migrant is, the better.
When immigration helps us to increase our strength in fast growing, high value
sectors, it increases our overall productivity and national income.
This is unquestionably a good thing.
Highly skilled immigration helps us achieve these goals.
But the international market for highly skilled individuals is highly competitive.
Today I want to talk about a new program that we are launching to aggressively target
the best and the brightest migrants from around the world.
The Global Talent Independent program, or GTI, represents a new way of approaching
highly skilled immigration to Australia. This year, we will be reducing our annual
permanent migration cap from 190,000 to 160,000. But within that cap, we will be
sharpening the emphasis on highly skilled immigration. The Global Talent
Independent programme has been allocated up to 5,000 places within our annual
programme.
Over time, it has the potential to have a transformative impact on the Australian
economy.
Let’s be clear: we have very big ambitions for the GTI.
The GTI has one key goal:
- To help build our future prosperity, by attracting to Australia the world’s most
highly skilled people in the world’s highest growth industries
Through the program we will seek out and recruit highly skilled and talented
individuals from around the globe - offering them a streamlined, priority visa pathway
to work and live permanently in Australia.
We are being deliberately aggressive in this policy area, and will be investing around
$13 million over the next three years on its execution.
We want people from the best universities and the most successful companies.
We want people with entrepreneurial ideas and deep skill sets, who can drive
innovation and create local jobs.
When highly skilled migrants enter Australian companies, they typically generate ideas
that lead to the employment of more Australians. I saw this first hand when I was
chairman of ninemsn, the joint venture between Nine and Microsoft. We would often
have Microsoft executives from the US suggest new initiatives in the business, and we
would then employ more Australians to make those initiatives happen. At its most
simple level, that is how highly skilled migrants add value to the Australian economy.
Applicants will be eligible to be considered for permanent residency under the GTI if
they meet two key criteria:
- They are likely to earn more than $149,000 per year in Australia; and
- They are highly skilled in one of seven key industry sectors
The benchmark of $149,000 ensures that the program targets truly high-skilled
individuals - with an ability to command higher wages in a competitive international
field. This benchmark aligns with the Fair Work high income threshold, which is
updated annually.
Of course, all applicants will be subject to the character, security and integrity checks
which are a fundamental part of our immigration system.
The second key criteria is skills relevant to high growth industries. There are seven
target industries. An applicant will be considered for the GTI if they meet the salary
benchmark, and have skills in one of these areas:
AgTech
Our agricultural sector is renowned the world over, and we want to be renowned for
AgTech the world over too.
Australia’s universities, research institutions, farmers, entrepreneurs and businesses
are working together to develop leading technologies to protect and grow our critical
Agriculture sector.
This is particularly important in the face of record-breaking and persistent drought. Australian innovations in this field include drought-resistant crops, robust irrigation
systems and technology that can predict yields and recommend optimal pastures
and stocking density.
We want to be a global centre of excellence in this most critical area.
FinTech
Fintech is a fast growing field in Australia, with around 650 businesses from start-ups
to listed companies involved in the sector.
KPMG data shows investment in Australian Fintech grew from $53 million US in
2012 to over $675 million in 2016.
Technological and regulatory change is shaking up the financial services sector, and
Australian businesses are jumping at the opportunity.
Stone & Chalk - one of the great Australian successes in this industry - first opened
its doors in 2015 as the only dedicated Fintech hub in Australia.
After just four years of operations, Stone and Chalk now houses more than 680
entrepreneurs working in more than 140 start-ups that have already collectively
raised more than AU$330 million in funding. More than 500 direct new jobs have
been created as a result of this growth.
MedTech
The Australian MedTech sector is delivering significant economic benefits and jobs
growth, while improving the health and wellbeing of Australians and people around
the world.
Australia has developed several companies that are world leaders in their
fields. And there is a thriving ecosystem of Australian businesses working on the
next big breakthroughs.
This highly specialised field requires people with complex and ever-changing skills.
The new Global Talent program provides the flexibility for businesses like these to
employ exceptionally talented people from overseas to further grow their business.
Cyber Security
Evolving technologies require protection, and Cyber security is another rapidly
growing sector where there is strong competition for international talent.
The unfortunate reality is that cyber security will continue to grow as an industry. We
know that there will continue to be attempts to disrupt information systems of all
kinds.
Australia's cyber security sector has a strong reputation globally and there are
already a number of home-grown cyber security success stories.
AustCyber notes that the sector has the potential to almost triple in size in coming
years, with revenues rising from just over $2 billion in 2016 to an expected $6 billion
by 2026.
We need to attract the right people to support this rapid expansion, while our home
grown talent pipeline is being established by Australian education institutions.
Quantum Information, Advanced Digital, Data Science and ICT
Deloitte Access Economics predicts demand for technology workers to grow by
100,000 by 2024 – with digital technologies to be worth almost $140 billion by next
year.
Data Scientists and Product Managers in this field are in critical demand, and supply
is not keeping up.
There is strong international competition in quantum computing - technology that has
the potential to transform the information economy and create the industries of the
future.
The ARC Centre of Excellence for Quantum Computation and Communication
Technology – Led by Laureate Fellow and 2018 Australian of the Year Professor
Michelle Simmons - is focused on delivering world-leading quantum research to
develop full-scale quantum systems.
Funded by the Australian Government, it is international collaboration between
seven Australian universities and more than 25 partners, to form one of the largest
combined efforts in quantum computation and communication research in the world.
Sophisticated ICT skills will only become more important over time, and we want to
position Australia at the forefront of this industry.
Space and Advanced Manufacturing
In September, the Prime Minister announced a $150 million investment in Australian
businesses and new technologies to support NASA’s campaign to return to the Moon
and travel to Mars.
It will make Australian businesses more competitive in international space supply
chains and increase Australia’s share in a growing US$350 billion global space
market.
Australia’s space sector will triple in size to $12 billion to create around 20,000 extra
jobs by 2030 – some of which will need to be filled by highly skilled individuals from
overseas.
Energy and Mining Technology
Australia’s energy and mining industry is a world leader when it comes to driving
down costs and increasing operational efficiencies.
A new report from accounting firm EY says that over the next five years, more than
three quarters of jobs in Australia’s mining industry will be enhanced or redesigned
by technology, increasing productivity by up to 23%.
The ability to harness new innovations and technologies, which Australia is well
placed to lead, will have the potential to improve the safety, productivity and
competitiveness of the sector over the coming decades and to provide a range of
exportable products and services.
As a leader in the development of knowledge, technology and practices for the
resources sector, Australia can export its research, development and intellectual
property to the world.
I’ve explained the criteria for a person to be eligible to apply under the GTI. Simply
put, they will need to be highly skilled in one of our seven key target areas, and they
will need to be someone who can command a benchmark salary of at least
$149k. They will of course also have to pass our character, security and integrity
checks.
But how will we find and attract these people in a highly competitive global market?
Firstly, I have deployed a team of Global Talent Officers in key locations around the
world.
Global Talent Officers are already located in Berlin, Washington DC, Singapore,
Shanghai, Santiago, and Dubai, and will have regional coverage. An officer has also
started in New Delhi today, to further the reach of the program.
The job of Global Talent Officers is to find the people I have described today, and
seek to recruit them to come to Australia.
This direct overseas recruitment effort of highly skilled individuals is the first of its
kind in Australia’s immigration program.
The officers will work with our Austrade presence in these regions, including the
Austrade landing pads, which lend themselves to using in-country networks and
contacts.
They are already working with the world’s top universities and professional
associations to market the GTI to exceptional candidates.
Once they are identified, applicants will have a dedicated Home Affairs contact to
guide them through the process, and applications will receive the highest priority
processing. Complete applications will be processed in weeks, not months.
Successful applicants will be granted permanent residency and be able to live and
work anywhere in Australia.
This is a compelling proposition, and we will use it to attract the world’s most highly
skilled migrants to Australia.
The GTI has the potential to have an immense positive impact on the Australian
economy. By bringing the very best and brightest in key growth sectors to Australia,
we will help to grow the Australian businesses of the future. We want high growth
businesses to stay in Australia, not move overseas in search of global talent. We want
the high growth businesses of tomorrow to be based right here, growing their
businesses locally, so that they can employ more Australians in the high wage jobs of
the future.
In time, I believe that we will look back on the Global Talent Initiative as having been
fundamental to the success of our nation.