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Posted: 2023-03-29 07:04:09

Shifts in Australia's migration intake over the past decade appear to be a major contributor to the sharp decline in productivity growth, threatening economic expansion and living standards, a new report finds.

The research, by economic think tank e61, used a dataset of all firms and workers in the country to find out which businesses were employing migrant workers and how they ranked for productivity performance.

"Migrant workers are more likely to work in lower productivity industries, and within industries they are more likely to work at lower productivity firms," the report concluded.

"This appears to have worsened over the decade to 2020."

This shift into lower productivity employment for migrants coincided with a significant increase in the immigration intake, especially for students.

"The number of migrant workers in Australia has increased by around 660,000 workers between 2011 and 2020," the report observed.

"This increase has been broad-based across the visa categories, with the largest single contribution coming from an increase in the number of workers holding student visas (particularly since 2014)."

Report co-author and e61 research director Dan Andrews told ABC News that the data show Australia is getting a decreasing economic return from its migration program.

"Migration is good for productivity, but the extent to which that is true has declined over time. And by over time I mean the course of the 2010s," he said.

"The immigration boom over the 2010s has been a factor in that declining productivity growth."

Mr Andrews said the research showed that this was not only due to a relative expansion in inherently lower productivity, labour-intensive sectors.

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