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Better pay, cheaper rent: inflation-squeezed New Zealanders leave for Australia in droves

  • ‘We feel like everything else is going up but not wages, so we had to think of where we could live a better life,’ says a resident who moved to Melbourne

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Some 44,534 New Zealanders left to live in Australia in 2023. Photo: Bloomberg
In a world divided by wars and politics, New Zealand is seen as a safe haven, drawing record numbers of immigrants since the pandemic.
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So why are New Zealanders themselves leaving for Australia in droves?

“We are paid so much better here,” said Connie Valdez Gamalinda, who moved with her husband and young daughter to Geelong, near Melbourne, from Porirua, near Wellington, earlier this year.

The early childhood worker earns A$11 (US$7.20) an hour more and was offered a relocation package of around A$17,000. Her husband Alvin, who works in mental health support, saw his pay double.

“And it’s not only the pay, rental properties are so much cheaper here, even the utilities are so much cheaper compared to New Zealand,” said Valdez Gamalinda.

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Some 44,534 New Zealanders, almost 1 per cent of the nation’s population of 5 million, left to live in Australia in 2023. The net migration loss, which takes into account Australians moving to New Zealand, was 27,011 last year, an 85 per cent increase on 2022 and the most since 2013.

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