STRATEGIC PAPER #110 - FUTURE JOBS FOR OUR RANGATAHI IN THE NORTH

Stopping the Brain Drain

For too long, our beautiful home in Taitokerau has operated like a leaky bucket. We watch our raw logs, our precious data, and worst of all, our talented rangatahi get shipped away to benefit outside markets. Our regional youth NEET rate sits at 14.5 per cent, and Māori unemployment is high at 10.3 per cent compared to the national average of 3.4 per cent. It breaks my heart to see our people struggling when there is so much vital work to be done right here on our own soil.

To fix these structural leaks, we are moving toward Te Ōhanga Mauri, the Economy of Life Force. This is all about keeping our wealth, our energy, and our people cycling within our local communities. By focusing on real local career options for our rangatahi, we can build a strong, self-sustaining economy. We want to guide our young people into meaningful paths that look after the land, the culture, the people, and our local wallet.

Solid Practical Foundations

The single biggest demand in our region right now is in building and construction. Back in 2022, we had a shortfall of over 8,400 vertical construction workers, and that gap is still keeping our families out of good homes. We need rangatahi to step up as house builders, carpenters, and machine operators. By learning these trades, our youth can work with local timber to build warm, dry houses for our whānau, stopping the housing shortage that forces our workers offshore.

Read More