Mr Brunsdon said as tourism returned to Queenstown, in five years — by 2025 — the number of international tourists visiting the resort would likely remain below pre-pandemic levels. Infometrics reported Queenstown-Lakes' overall unemployment level was forecast to rise from 1.1 per cent in the March 2020 quarter, to 18.5 per cent in March next year.
Nearly 8000, or about 25 per cent, of the district's 31,200 jobs would be lost by March and the district's job losses would result $270million in lost earnings.
The projected fall in employment of 25.2 per cent places Queenstown-Lakes as the second-hardest hit district in the country, behind the Mackenzie district, and just ahead of Kaikoura and Westland as each of the four districts rely heavily on international tourism.
Queenstown-Lakes would be the fifth-hardest hit area in New Zealand in terms of the total number of jobs lost — behind Auckland, Christchurch, Wellington and Hamilton.
However, the other areas have larger workforces and the impact would be more keenly felt in Queenstown.
Mr Boult yesterday said the report was troubling but noted the district was already making "big steps ... to improve our future".
"Predicting how and when domestic and international tourists come back to the Queenstown Lakes is a tough game, but we are more hopeful than the research on this front. The projections show that the timing of a transtasman bubble, or the extent to which Kiwis travel down here, could make the difference of nearly 1000 jobs."
Yesterday The New Zealand Herald reported the 40-strong bilateral group, the Trans-Tasman Safe Border Group, had a detailed proposal to put to the Government for the safe and sustainable reopening of the border that was now in the final stages of development.
Tourism accounts for 64 per cent of all employment in the Queenstown-Lakes district, and international tourists contributed 63 per cent of all tourist spending, Infometrics said in its report.
Infometrics said the economic declines in the district would take place in accommodation and food services (-$361.9million, or -66.1 per cent); transport, postal and warehousing (-$49.6million, or -29.9 per cent); arts and recreation services (-$46.4million, or -25.6 per cent), and construction ($58.6million, or -16.4 per cent).
Resilient districts across New Zealand, Mr Brunsdon wrote, typically had diversified industry and strong export-focused industries such as agriculture and food manufacturing.
Agriculture and food manufacturing made up 3 per cent of Queenstown-Lakes' employment numbers in 2020, compared to 9 per cent across New Zealand.
- Otago Daily Times