New Zealand Recruitment

Job market is improving and still rising

by admin on July 16, 2010

Research and employment survey results show that the job market is not as bad as people make it out to be, and it is getting better each month.

Momentum continues to build in the New Zealand employment market, according to a study of the 30,000 jobs listed on Trade Me Jobs in the second quarter of 2010.

Jimmy McGee, Trade Me’s Head of Commercial, said there had been a significant lift in activity from employers compared to the same period in 2009. “We’ve seen the number of jobs listed increase by 29% year-on-year, so things have certainly been heading in the right direction.”

He said the number of jobs listed had also increased compared to the first quarter of 2010, up 15%. “Businesses appear to have taken a more expansionary approach, confident the recession is behind us. Plus consumer confidence has improved, aided by the upcoming tax changes. Both of these factors have fuelled recruitment demand for staff.

“We’ve seen that IT, sales and HR & recruitment areas have all been particularly active, with advertised vacancies up strongly over recent months and all up more than 30% on this time last year.”

Auckland (21%), Waikato (20%), Gisborne (27%) and Wellington (19%) all delivered strong listings growth over the past quarter, but it was Taranaki (43%) that was the outstanding performer.

“While Taranaki’s manufacturing sector has driven some of the growth, there’s clear improvement across the board,” said McGee.

Pay packets down

Over the past year, pay packets on offer dropped for the majority of jobs, but McGee said the IT and banking & finance sectors bucked the trend. “There was greater demand for candidates in these sectors – for example we saw pay rates for IT project managers and business analysts increase by 17% and 11% respectively.”

Wellington was one of the few areas where pay rates rose, and Wellington City regained the mantle as the highest paid location with an average pay of $74,647. Both Whangarei and the Far North featured in the top paid locations, as recruitment activity in the healthcare sector boosted the average pay on offer.

Future trends

McGee said a couple of trends were likely to emerge. “Firstly, as demand for highly skilled candidates increases, so too will the pay rates required to attract them.

“Secondly, we expect the rate of growth in the employment market to slow as global concerns about a potential ‘double-dip’ recession heighten. Here in New Zealand we may be in better shape than most countries, but we’re not certainly not immune from anxiety overseas.”

Note: The full set of results from Trade Me Jobs follows.

CONTACT: Jimmy McGee 021 721 316

Head of Commercial, Trade Me

Employment survey results: April-June 2010

1. Listings growth by job

Job

Change vs. Q1/2010

Change vs. Q2/2009

Accounting

21%

-17%

Agriculture, fishing & forestry

19%

71%

Banking, finance & insurance

18%

24%

Construction & architecture

2%

25%

Customer Service

16%

63%

Education

14%

21%

Engineering

19%

-12%

Government & council

-3%

-10%

Healthcare

11%

18%

Hospitality & tourism

-1%

53%

HR & Recruitment

26%

67%

IT

37%

32%

Legal

15%

12%

Manufacturing & operations

10%

57%

Marketing, media & comms

2%

43%

Office & administration

18%

53%

Retail

3%

41%

Sales

24%

65%

Science & technology

-17%

-11%

Trades & services

17%

50%

Transport & logistics

16%

52%

Total

15%

29%

2. Average rates of pay by job (full-time jobs only)

Highest paid

Pay rate ($)

1

Doctors

135,838

2

IT architects

128,732

3

IT sales & pre-sales

126,188

4

IT project managers

120,562

5

Financial controllers

111,097

Lowest paid

Pay rate ($)

1

Kitchen staff

31,484

2

Waiting staff

32,123

3

Reception & front desk

32,778

4

Labourers

33,284

5

Retail assistants

33,597

3. Listings growth by region

Region

Change vs. Q1/2010

Change vs. Q2/2009

Auckland

21%

32%

Bay Of Plenty

11%

35%

Canterbury

5%

20%

Gisborne

27%

88%

Hawkes Bay

1%

44%

Manawatu / Wanganui

4%

34%

Marlborough

2%

72%

Nelson / Tasman

-17%

6%

Northland

2%

41%

Otago

3%

42%

Southland

10%

6%

Taranaki

43%

55%

Waikato

20%

30%

Wellington

19%

24%

West Coast

-3%

7%

Total

15%

29%

4. Average rates of pay by region (full-time jobs only)

Highest paid

Pay rate ($)

1

Wellington City

74,647

2

Auckland City

71,420

3

Whangarei

61,706

4

West Coast (Grey)

59,933

5

Far North

58,850

Lowest paid

Pay rate ($)

1

Horowhenua

42,045

2

Selwyn (Canterbury)

42,873

3

Gisborne

44,022

4

Waipa (Waikato)

44,144

5

Ashburton

45,968

NB: All figures based on job listings on Trade Me Jobs Apr-Jun 2010. Segments with less than 50 jobs excluded.

About Trade Me Jobs

Trade Me Jobs (trademejobs.co.nz) is Trade Me’s specialist job site. In June 2010, over 690,000 Kiwis visited Trade Me Jobs (domestic unique browsers, Nielsen Online). Details of pay by profession for the first half of 2010 are published in the Trade Me Jobs Salary Guide.

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