Migrant Tales – Foreign IT Workers Need Not Apply There Is No Shortage

not hiring

Looking for an IT job in New Zealand? don’t leave home without one

Continuing in our series of Migrant Tales, first hand accounts of the migrant experience of New Zealand taken from places around the net.

Today’s tale was first published on a for-profit emigration site, the author tells a familiar story about how difficult it is for migrants to find jobs in the IT sector. There is simply no demand for foreign workers because employers prefer NZ experience and connections. He says there is no shortage in this sector.

If you are trying to emigrate to New Zealand to work in IT this is for you, our advice is to save your money and look elsewhere.

I’ve largely given up on getting an NZ job or moving to NZ.  I  thought NZ had a high demand for workers in my field (IT), as the NZ gov lists the IT sector on a couple different skill shortage lists, but the catch-22 I described seems to prove that there is, in reality, no significant skills shortage in the IT field.  I can believe that IT workers in NZ don’t have any problem getting a job, but the fact is that  if there truly was a substantial IT worker shortage in NZ, then IT employers would be welcoming foreign IT workers.  But according to the  Seek job site, they are apparently not as just about every job I’ve ever  seen there (all but one, which wasn’t in Auckland) requires that applicants have a legal right to live and work in NZ to even apply.  That tells me they are doing just fine with the the current domestic supply of IT workers.

If I was under 30 and could get the Working Holiday Visa, and could then  be in the pool to be considered, that would be one thing, but I’m not so my options are limited.  I could pursue a skilled migrant visa, but I  understand that’s 9 month processing time, and given my circumstances, that requires more patience than I have.

I don’t blame NZ Immigration for requiring a job offer to get a worker visa.  It’s logical that they instituted this condition as a way of verifying, from NZ employers, that the worker shortage really exists, and the employers are pretty much saying that the shortage does NOT, in fact exist.  It’s the job of NZ Immigration to protect NZ workers, and  their current policy does that well.

Things can change so maybe I’ll get there yet, but for now, I’m exploring other career possibilities that have nothing to do with NZ.

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IT whiz can’t find a job:  Charlie is American, a high end IT and Corporate Governance Professional with many years of experience. He describes his emigration to New Zealand as being the single greatest tragedy of his life.

“Thank you!

Thank you for telling the truth about New Zealand!

Before coming here – I was told for six years what a wonderful place this was, how “forward thinking” the government and corporations were, how “progressive” the culture was, and how “friendly” the New Zealand people were.

As a high end IT and Corporate Governance Professional with 24 years of experience, I was tired of the hated in the USA, and after being told for those six years of research that I would be welcome in New Zealand, I packed up my cat and came here.

Well, after almost three years, and being unemployed for the last 16 months, and having lost everything in the world I had – I must admit that I have failed completely.

This has been the single greatest tragedy of my life.

One of many examples: The Electrical Commission (a ministry of government) told a friend of mine that they had just hired (a German), that “we would tolerate a German – but we would NEVER hire an American.” At the time they had 97 jobs open that they could NOT fill with kiwis.

I have been told that the reasons I cannot have a job in New Zealand is:

“You are too over qualified” (this should be the national anthem of New Zealand – as every foreigner I know has heard this over and over again). “You are a foreigner – we would never hire a foreigner”. “You are an American – we would never hire an American.”

As for being friendly – I have not had one date with a woman since I arrived here. I have been told repeatedly, and with no hint of regard or regret that: “Yes, we’re kiwi women, we hate American men!”

Corporate management in New Zealand is directly out of the “kindergarten school yard” – I was black listed after two newspaper articles came out on me, asking “why can’t this IT Whiz find a job?”

Gen-i (Telecom) hired me immediately – only to fire me five months later.

I have been told time and time again that Kiwis: “hate, loath, despise, and fear” foreigners – and the higher your level of professional background is the less likely you will every get a job here.

I came here by myself, so I feel so very sorry for the families that came here, believing in that lie of a “quality of life”. There is no “quality of life” here – not even for the kiwis themselves.

I have never seen a people so terrified of “reality”. And I did not think it possible to have an entire culture based on “lying”.

Why? Because you cannot be afraid of reality and tell the truth.

New Zealand is a collective “fantasy world” which – because of fear – is falling backwards through time at an exponential rate: in other words, its dropping like a rock towards the Stone Age.

One of the many shocks I suffered here when I got off the plane in August 2007 was the realization that New Zealand was 25 years behind the rest of the entire world. And now, barely three years later – it is 35 years behind the rest of the entire world – and no one cares.

I know foreign PhD’s here who came to be part of the “quality of life” and are scrubbing test tubes and mopping floors (based on the fact that actually have real experience in their profession).

I know doctors and executive managers who are driving taxi cabs (based only on the color of their skin).

I know industrial designers who are making beds (based only on the color of their skin).

I know Project Managers who are pressing sheets (based only on the color of their skin).

And always, there is the “rage” – that rage that is barely beneath the surface of all kiwis. It comes from being afraid all the time. It is the only way they can express themselves.

Go to a “Sevens” after party on Courtney Street and you can see it (or after midnight any night). They are going to have a good time – and they do NOT care who they hurt.

And the streets are a sea of broken beer bottles – and we all KNOW not to be out after midnight. That is when what little control the kiwis have over their rage is let loose.

The crime rate here is off the charts, but because that does not sound “good” – it is never reported.

I worked for ten months for one small company here, with 15 employees. Two of them had been attacked by drunken gangs with empty beer bottles (the kiwis’ weapon of choice) on two separate occasions. What are the odds of that?

Over one million kiwis have fled New Zealand. The “best and the brightest” that New Zealand has to offer are gone. So, if the “best and the brightest” are gone – who does that leave behind?

An additional 100,000 kiwis leave every year – those coming up through university, and those who just cannot take the abuse any more.

Again – living in a fantasy world means you can never face “reality” – you can never tell the truth.

I am an aboriginal in my own country, but I never knew bigotry, prejudice, or racism until coming to New Zealand.

To this day, I still get emails from New Zealand Immigration that say things like: “yes, its true that skilled migrants with proper work visas and job are randomly being deported, but that’s no reason for you not to come!”

The new Prime Minister, Mr. Key, made a statement last year about how New Zealand did not have enough “high end professionals” and that was why the corporations were loosing money.

He then went on to say that he would pass a law that would make it easier for high end professionals to “bring their money with them”.

After reading that – I was physically sick for a month. I then wrote to Mr. Key, assuring him that I was already here, was a high end professional, and I needed a job.

I went on to say that I could easily find him all the high end professionals that he needs – they are already here: washing dishes, cleaning toilets, and digging ditches.

Why? Because they have been “blacklisted” by the very corporations that Mr. Key was talking about.

In New Zealand, if you actually know how to do your job, you are considered a threat, and must be removed from sight.

This same story about “not having enough high end professionals” was told back in 2007 after I first got here, and which is why those newspaper stories were done on me. They got me two jobs, and then cost me everything I had.

Please encourage your friends and families to speak out here, and in your own countries. Convince people NOT to come to New Zealand.

and

An IT Professional Puts His Finger On IT

5 thoughts on “Migrant Tales – Foreign IT Workers Need Not Apply There Is No Shortage

  1. I feel really embarrassed that I am a Kiwi but what you say is totally true. I know exactly what you guys are talking about. I left New Zealand in my twenties and returned after a couple of years (having been through many changes) and I couldn’t stand them either so I left again and living happily in Europe for 17 years. I don’t even bother returning for visits now.

    It’s also criminal what the NZ state are doing to entice immigrants over there. When I see some of their advertising material, I am left wondering if they are talking about New Zealand or some other country.

  2. This is not an “IT specific” problem, even a profesional problem. This is an “us vs. them” problem.
    The industry that I’m involved in has proven production methods that are rejected out of hand because they were introduced by other than Kiwi.
    I think that the pace of the real world scares Kiwis, that’s why they like it 25-50 years behind the times.
    Cracks me up, 4g cell phone about half way through life cycle elsewhere, 3g just rolling out [and failing badly several times] here. 3g is not available in outlying areas, too.
    Technology here is a joke. Yet, when given an opportunity to grab some world class expertise, it’s dismissed because it did not originate here [in nz].

    Talk about cutting your nose off to spite your face.

  3. http://www.stuff.co.nz/dominion-post/news/politics/7836794/Labour-pledges-Local-workers-first
    Labour is promising to give unemployed locals “first crack” at jobs by making it harder for businesses to bring in migrant workers.

    Leader David Shearer said his party would require proof that employers had “actively engaged” with Work and Income and industry training organisations, before approving workers from overseas.

    So all the work requiring a university education, will be done by those from polytechnics, as “universities are only about theory, not practice” (gag) and “enthusiasm beats education” (get a butcher to operate on you instead of a surgeon, they’ve dealt with more bodies) … I predict a drop in foreign student enrolments, since if they can’t get a job in their field in NZ AFTER they’ve begun and completed their degree there … why even consider going there?

  4. http://www.stuff.co.nz/dominion-post/news/politics/7836794/Labour-pledges-Local-workers-first
    Labour is promising to give unemployed locals “first crack” at jobs by making it harder for businesses to bring in migrant workers.

    Leader David Shearer said his party would require proof that employers had “actively engaged” with Work and Income and industry training organisations, before approving workers from overseas.

    So all the positions requiring university education will be filled with those from polytechnics? After all, “university is all about theory, which is useless in the real world” (and yet you have a job vacancy requiring skills that are only taught there) … and “enthusiasm is more important than education” (so a butcher is as good as a surgeon?) … this will result in a drop of foreign student enrolments – if they can’t get a job in NZ in their field – why study there?

  5. http://www.stuff.co.nz/dominion-post/news/politics/7836794/Labour-pledges-Local-workers-first
    Labour is promising to give unemployed locals “first crack” at jobs by making it harder for businesses to bring in migrant workers.

    Leader David Shearer said his party would require proof that employers had “actively engaged” with Work and Income and industry training organisations, before approving workers from overseas.

    So positions requiring the university-educated, will be filled by those from polytechnics? After all, as I kept being told “university is all about theory, they have no practical experience (gag). This will also result in a drop of foreign students … if they can’t get a job in their field in NZ – why study there?

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