Backpackers flock to Australia with working holiday visa

Monday, 24 Aug, 2007 0

A report in the UK says that record numbers of backpackers received an Australian working holiday visa in the past year, according to new figures released by the Department of Immigration.

In the nine months to March, 102,966 backpackers successfully applied for the visa, up 15 per cent from the same period in the previous year and the highest number of Australian working holiday visas, 23,839, were issued to young people from the United Kingdom, a reversal of a market downturn in recent years.

The Department of Immigration is predicting the new year will also be a record one, with 130,000 visas to be granted, up from a total of 111,973 this year.

Australian authorities welcome the increase as backpackers spend money, create jobs and fill labour shortages in some sectors, in a country where unemployment in some ares is down to 2%.

The Australian Tourism Export Council’s Backpacker Tourism Advisory Panel chairman Julian Ledger told The Age the increase in working holidaymakers is good news for Australia’s labour-starved business sector. “Many businesses, especially in regional Australia, are dependent on backpacker labour,” he said.

Changes in the Australian working holiday visa rules earlier this year allow backpackers to work for six months with a single employer, rather than three months under the old rules.

It is also now possible to get a visa extension for a second year if a backpacker has done at least three months agricultural work.

The Australian working holiday visa programme is aimed at encouraging cultural exchange and closer ties between Britain and Australia by allowing young people to enjoy extended travel, supplemented by employment.

Report by The Mole



 

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John Alwyn-Jones



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