Times Australia Today

Elders Real Estate

Australia & The World

The consequences of immigration

The truth about labour shortages, wage pressure, and the economic reality behind migration

Migration is one of the most emotionally charged issues in Australia — for households, for politicians, and increasingly for businesses. On one hand, migration is essential for economic growth, filling skill shortages, supporting ageing demographics, and keeping universities alive. On the other hand, rapid population growth puts pressure on housing, wages, infrastructure, and the cost of living.

But beneath the politics and headlines lies a deeper, under-examined issue:
Migration carries hidden costs for businesses — both direct and indirect — yet Australia still fundamentally relies on it for economic survival.

This article breaks down the real economic story behind migration, how it affects businesses, why employers rely on it, and what Australia must do to ensure migration supports — rather than strains — the economy.

THE SHORT VERSION — WHAT THIS MEANS FOR YOU

Migration helps businesses by:

  • filling labour gaps

  • bringing specialised skills

  • supporting growth

  • reducing wage pressure in some sectors

  • increasing customer demand

But migration also costs businesses through:

  • onboarding and training

  • higher churn in some roles

  • cultural integration challenges

  • housing shortages limiting worker mobility

  • wage compression at lower skill levels

  • competition for rental accommodation

  • visa and compliance costs

  • infrastructure strains hurting productivity

Despite these challenges, Australia cannot maintain economic growth without migration — the demographics simply don’t allow it.

1. WHY AUSTRALIA NEEDS MIGRATION — THE DEMOGRAPHIC REALITY

Australia’s population would shrink without migration.

Key demographic pressures:

  • low birth rate (1.6)

  • ageing workforce

  • rising retirements

  • shrinking domestic labour pipeline

  • declining natural population growth

Migration fills the workforce gap

Over the next decade, Australia needs:

  • nurses

  • doctors

  • engineers

  • construction workers

  • aged care workers

  • hospitality workers

  • miners

  • agricultural workers

  • educators

  • IT and cybersecurity professionals

Without migration, whole industries would collapse.

2. THE BENEFITS OF MIGRATION FOR BUSINESSES

1. Filling labour shortages

Critical in healthcare, hospitality, construction, agriculture, retail, logistics, IT.

2. Bringing specialist skills

AI engineers, cybersecurity analysts, robotics technicians, advanced engineers, medical specialists.

3. Supporting growth

Businesses can expand only if there are enough workers.

4. Increasing demand

Migrants rent homes, buy groceries, use services — supporting local businesses.

5. Lowering labour shortages in regional areas

Migration fills essential roles in remote regions where locals cannot or will not relocate.

Migration is one of the biggest reasons Australia avoided a deep recession in the 2020s.

3. THE HIDDEN COSTS OF MIGRATION FOR BUSINESSES

For all its benefits, migration also creates real and often overlooked challenges.

1. Housing shortages make it hard to attract and retain workers

High rents and low vacancy rates mean:

  • workers can’t afford to live near their jobs

  • many leave because housing is too expensive

  • employers struggle to recruit

  • businesses in regional areas cannot fill critical roles

Housing is now one of the biggest barriers to labour mobility.

2. Onboarding and training costs are higher

Migrants often need:

  • additional training

  • accreditation transfer

  • English-language support

  • skills recognition

  • cultural orientation

  • workplace induction

This takes time and money.

3. Skills mismatch risk

Some migrants are highly qualified but work in lower-skilled roles because:

  • their qualifications are not recognised

  • bridging courses are expensive

  • accreditation is slow

  • Australian employers prefer “local experience”

Underemployment reduces business productivity.

4. Increased workforce churn

Migrants may:

  • change jobs for better visa conditions

  • relocate frequently

  • return home unexpectedly

  • move to metropolitan areas for better opportunities

High churn increases:

  • recruitment costs

  • training costs

  • productivity disruption

5. Visa complexity and compliance costs

Employers face:

  • legal fees

  • sponsorship fees

  • compliance risk

  • monitoring obligations

  • paperwork burden

Smaller businesses are particularly strained.

6. Wage compression in lower-skilled sectors

Migration helps reduce shortages —
but can temporarily depress wage pressure in industries like:

  • hospitality

  • retail

  • cleaning

  • agriculture

  • food processing

  • delivery work

  • aged care (partially)

Lower wage pressure benefits employers in the short term, but long-term wage stagnation reduces consumer spending — which hurts businesses.

7. Infrastructure pressure reduces productivity

Rapid migration increases demand on:

  • transport

  • hospitals

  • schools

  • roads

  • energy

  • water systems

When infrastructure is under strain:

  • travel times increase

  • congestion reduces productivity

  • business logistics become less efficient

Businesses pay the price of under-planned growth.

8. Cultural and workplace integration challenges

When businesses hire globally, they must:

  • build inclusive cultures

  • provide communication support

  • train managers in cultural competence

  • navigate expectations around work styles and hierarchy

This requires real investment.

4. INDUSTRIES MOST AFFECTED BY MIGRATION — BOTH GOOD AND BAD

1. Healthcare

Most dependent on migration.
Benefits greatly from foreign-trained staff.
But onboarding and accreditation are slow and expensive.

2. Construction

Needs tens of thousands of workers.
Migration fills gaps — but high housing costs limit retention.

3. Hospitality & tourism

Rapidly dependent on migrant labour.
But wage compression is common.

4. Agriculture

Backbone of seasonal migrant work.
But high accommodation costs and poor housing conditions reduce worker availability.

5. Tech & engineering

Relies heavily on global talent.
Migration provides essential high-skill workers.

6. Universities

International students keep the sector financially afloat.

7. Aged care

Severe worker shortages — migration essential.

Migration strengthens these sectors — but exposes their structural weaknesses.

5. HOW MIGRATION AFFECTS WAGES

Migration does not suppress wages across the entire economy.
But it does affect certain segments.

Wages likely to fall or stagnate:

  • hospitality

  • retail

  • cleaning

  • agriculture

  • basic service roles

Wages likely to rise:

  • engineering

  • healthcare

  • trades

  • tech

  • specialised roles

Neutral impact:

  • public service

  • education

  • large corporate sectors

The impact is uneven and industry-specific.

6. MIGRATION HELPS AUSTRALIA AVOID A DEEPER ECONOMIC CRISIS

Despite the hidden costs, migration remains essential.

Without migration:

  • GDP would fall

  • labour shortages worsen

  • hospitals collapse

  • aged care crisis intensifies

  • inflation worsens as supply capacity shrinks

  • construction slows further

  • universities lose funding

  • workforce shrinks

  • government tax base shrinks

Migration is not a luxury — it is a requirement for a functioning modern economy.

7. WHAT AUSTRALIA MUST DO TO GET MIGRATION RIGHT

To keep migration sustainable and beneficial, Australia must address its structural weaknesses.

1. Build more housing — fast

Migration without housing is a recipe for:

  • rent inflation

  • worker shortages

  • social tension

Housing supply must match population growth.

2. Reform accreditation pathways

Make it faster and easier for migrants to work in their trained professions.

3. Prioritise skills Australia actually needs

Align migration with:

  • healthcare

  • construction

  • engineering

  • cybersecurity

  • energy

  • AI

  • aged care

Not low-productivity, low-wage roles.

4. Improve settlement support

Better:

  • language training

  • skills recognition

  • career counselling

  • regional support programs

5. Reduce visa complexity

Simplify:

  • sponsorship rules

  • compliance obligations

  • pathways to permanent residency

6. Align migration with infrastructure planning

Every intake should match:

  • housing availability

  • transport capacity

  • healthcare capacity

  • school places

Migration is not the issue — planning is.

8. WHAT MIGRATION WILL LOOK LIKE BY 2035

More skilled migration

Less temporary, low-skill intake.

Better regional settlement

Incentivised with infrastructure investment.

Clearer pathways to permanent residency

To attract long-term talent.

Higher competition for global workers

Australia must differentiate itself.

Greater investment in housing supply

Essential for economic stability.

THE BOTTOM LINE

Migration has hidden costs for businesses:

  • training

  • turnover

  • housing shortages

  • accreditation delays

  • infrastructure pressure

  • wage compression in some sectors

But these costs pale in comparison to the cost of not having migration.

Australia’s economy — and many of its most essential industries — depend on a steady stream of skilled and dedicated migrants.

The challenge isn’t migration.

It’s planning for it properly.

Trump supports the AUKUS alliance

The Latest Updates on the AUKUS Alliance From Washington As 2025 draws to a close, the AUKUS security partnership between Austr...

AI’s Stunning Capabilities Come With a Dark Side: Can Technology Be Weaponised by Bad Actors?

Artificial intelligence is reshaping the world at extraordinary speed. It can draft legal arguments, translate languages, diag...

The hidden cost of immigration

The truth about labour shortages, wage pressure, and the economic reality behind migration Migration is one of ...

Is Australia heading for a recession?

A Clear & Honest Outlook for 2025–2026 Australia’s economy is slowing. Consumers are pulling back. Retail s...

What Global Shifts Mean for a Middle Power Like Us

Australia sits on the edge of the world’s most strategically important region — the Indo-Pacific — at a time when global stabi...