Any adjustment to New Zealand's immigration rules which reduced in-demand skills will have serious implications for businesses, says BusinessNZ chief executive Kirk Hope.
If New Zealand could not supply the skilled people needed to help businesses grow, they had to import those skills. Cutting back on immigration would reduce the supply of labour, stopping growth and hurting the economy.
Hope took issue with a recent Salvation Army report which claimed young unemployed New Zealanders were not getting employment opportunities because of unfair competition from migrant workers.
The report "What Next -- Addressing New Zealand's Youth Unemployment" said 75,000 unemployed New Zealanders would take work if it was available.
"This number is incorrect as official statistics show job-seeker unavailability -- rather than work unavailability -- [which] means the number of young New Zealanders available for work is far less than the 75,000 claimed."