The Use of Temporary Skilled Migration in Australian Organisations

Purpose: The spread of economic global integration in the last 50 years has resulted in the recent emergence of global labour markets. Ageing populations and skill shortages have placed significant pressure upon Australia's economic sustainability and survival in a global economy. The global ra...

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Main Authors: Cameron, Roslyn, Harrison, J.
Format: Journal Article
Published: Emerald Group Publishing Ltd. 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/8728
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author Cameron, Roslyn
Harrison, J.
author_facet Cameron, Roslyn
Harrison, J.
author_sort Cameron, Roslyn
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description Purpose: The spread of economic global integration in the last 50 years has resulted in the recent emergence of global labour markets. Ageing populations and skill shortages have placed significant pressure upon Australia's economic sustainability and survival in a global economy. The global race for talent has seen the emergence of skilled migration as a key element in Australia's strategy to address major human capital trends and issues and to source pools of talent considered highly skilled or in demand. This paper seeks to address these issues. Design/methodology/approach: This paper draws together research on skilled migration in the Australian context and the factors that explain use of Australia's 457 visa scheme by organisations for attracting and recruiting talent. Data from a survey of members of the Australian Human Resources Institute (n=1,045) is analysed using logistic regression. Findings: The results show that larger, goods producing, organisations with skills shortages are more likely to employ skilled migrants, while not-for-profit and regional organisations are less likely. Sponsorship of 457 visa workers for permanent residency is more likely in larger, regional organisations willing to pay above market rates to fill long‐term vacancies and seeking to attract international skills and knowledge but less likely in public organisations. Research limitations/implications: The study has limitations related to the fact that the sample is limited to Australian members of a human resource professional body. Originality/value: There is very little literature on the use of temporary skilled migration by organisations from a HRM perspective. The findings shed light upon the extent of employer‐sponsored temporary skilled migration as a talent sourcing strategy in a range of industries and organisations across Australia.
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-87282017-09-13T14:48:43Z The Use of Temporary Skilled Migration in Australian Organisations Cameron, Roslyn Harrison, J. skilled workers recruitment human resource management workforce Australia migrant workers Purpose: The spread of economic global integration in the last 50 years has resulted in the recent emergence of global labour markets. Ageing populations and skill shortages have placed significant pressure upon Australia's economic sustainability and survival in a global economy. The global race for talent has seen the emergence of skilled migration as a key element in Australia's strategy to address major human capital trends and issues and to source pools of talent considered highly skilled or in demand. This paper seeks to address these issues. Design/methodology/approach: This paper draws together research on skilled migration in the Australian context and the factors that explain use of Australia's 457 visa scheme by organisations for attracting and recruiting talent. Data from a survey of members of the Australian Human Resources Institute (n=1,045) is analysed using logistic regression. Findings: The results show that larger, goods producing, organisations with skills shortages are more likely to employ skilled migrants, while not-for-profit and regional organisations are less likely. Sponsorship of 457 visa workers for permanent residency is more likely in larger, regional organisations willing to pay above market rates to fill long‐term vacancies and seeking to attract international skills and knowledge but less likely in public organisations. Research limitations/implications: The study has limitations related to the fact that the sample is limited to Australian members of a human resource professional body. Originality/value: There is very little literature on the use of temporary skilled migration by organisations from a HRM perspective. The findings shed light upon the extent of employer‐sponsored temporary skilled migration as a talent sourcing strategy in a range of industries and organisations across Australia. 2013 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/8728 10.1108/IJOA-10-2011-0517 Emerald Group Publishing Ltd. restricted
spellingShingle skilled workers
recruitment
human resource management
workforce
Australia
migrant workers
Cameron, Roslyn
Harrison, J.
The Use of Temporary Skilled Migration in Australian Organisations
title The Use of Temporary Skilled Migration in Australian Organisations
title_full The Use of Temporary Skilled Migration in Australian Organisations
title_fullStr The Use of Temporary Skilled Migration in Australian Organisations
title_full_unstemmed The Use of Temporary Skilled Migration in Australian Organisations
title_short The Use of Temporary Skilled Migration in Australian Organisations
title_sort use of temporary skilled migration in australian organisations
topic skilled workers
recruitment
human resource management
workforce
Australia
migrant workers
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/8728