As The Cost Of Living Soars New Technology Is Helping Australians

The Australian technology industry is facing an employment crisis. The COVID border closures and a growing reliance on digital technologies have created a competitive market for tech workers, where demand for roles such as computer engineers, programmers, developers, and data professionals is rising. Still, the talent supply through graduate and visa programs is not generating enough workers to meet the demand, making recruitment and retention problematic.

The Hays Salary Guide Report FY21/22, a survey of nearly 3,500 organizations, revealed that 68% of the local technology industry is suffering from skills shortages. However, only 58% of the same cohort of local technology companies are expected to increase their permanent headcount FY21/22, highlighting the skills shortage.

While the recent change of government came with a pledge from the Australian Labor Party to add 1.2 million workers into the technology sector by 2030, there remains an 8-year skills shortage gap that will add pressure to an industry already experiencing high turnover and rising employment costs as workers find it easier to build their careers and salaries by chasing new job opportunities rather than dedicating themselves to a single company.

Australia’s Tech Jobs Opportunity — Cracking the Code to Australia’s Best Jobs Report, produced by the Tech Council of Australia, the peak industry body for Australia’s tech sector, found that the tech sector already pays nearly 32% more on an hourly basis and 64% more every week in remuneration than the Australia-wide average, adding pressure on tech companies to consider non-cash benefits and rewards as part of their recruitment and retainment strategies.

With rising energy costs and interest rates dominating workers’ day-to-day lives, they’re seeking higher wages to address the cost of living pressures. If their current employer can’t meet their expectations, others will step in and offer a more lucrative remuneration package.

But it’s not just cashed that workers are after. Other benefits play an important role when seeking new working opportunities. The user identified as most important by employees in the Hays Salary Guide Report FY21/22 was Flexible Work Practices, including remote working opportunities, fluid working hours, and additional annual leave.

The Best Jobs Report also found that the tech sector is more likely to adopt technology that allows workers to work from home at a higher rate than other industries, even before the pandemic. For example, a third of all new workers hired since the pandemic by tech giant Atlassian is located at least two hours outside a major city.

Technology

While that can go a long way to meet workers’ expectations, for the tech sector, flexible working conditions such as remote working and variable working hours have become ubiquitous and does little to sway employees to either join a company or stay in their current roles. This is why tech companies must find innovative and meaningful benefits to compel employees to visit or join their payroll.

The pandemic has impacted reshaping remuneration packages to include working-from-home incentives such as allowances for WIFI, IT equipment, office furniture, stationery, and meals. But with the cost of living pressures set to impact households shortly, employers can extend flexible working conditions to provide easier and earlier access to pay, allowing workers to break the monthly pay cycle and get their hands on their hard-earned cash earlier.

The experience of living pay cycle to pay cycle is stressful and can impact the well-being and productivity of an employee. Accessing their salaries early involves some interest-bearing, fee-laden loans for most workers. Whether it’s payday lenders or begging their bank for an overdraft, early access to compensation tends to happen outside their employment arrangement, creating risk and expense at a vulnerable point in their lives.

And while pay-on-demand services like Beforepay have tried to address this by formally tying in borrowing capacity to the employee’s wage cycle, they remain a cumbersome and expensive option that carries considerable stress and risk to the employee.

Australian Fintech startup CashD has set about to change this by taking the need to access credit and replacing it with an early wage access (EWA) solution that provides a direct path to the cash that an employee has earned but is awaiting a date in the future to be paid into their bank account.

By integrating their platform with an employer’s payroll and HR systems, employees can gain controlled access to a portion of their accrued pay daily without needing loan contracts or the threats of defaulting repayments.

“We set about to change how people are paid,” noted Founder and CEO Marcus Lasarow. “Receiving early access to the salary you have already earned doesn’t have to be a risky, nor an expensive process.”

Employers can offer an EWA service as a benefit that forms part of an extended remuneration package. As no contracts or lending are involved, fees can be borne by the employer or shared with the employee, depending on how remuneration packages are structured.

EWA solutions like CashD can also be seen as a well-being solution supporting employees’ culture and financial health. When financial stress is carried into the work environment, it manifests in distractions, absenteeism, reduced performance, and, ultimately, employee turnover.

The confluence of rising inflation and interest rates, along with the growing skills shortage, means businesses need tmustinnovative and meaningful ways to entice workers. An EWA arrangement is one way to solve this dilemma. Austech Media is Australian press release distribution and publishing organization dedicated to the technology industry. Incorporating the diffusion of technology news and events

Bella E. McMahon
I am a freelance writer who started blogging in college. I am fascinated by human nature, politics, culture, technology, and pop culture. In addition to my writing, I enjoy exploring new places, trying out new things, and engaging in conversations with new people. Some of my favorite hobbies are reading, playing music, making crafts, writing, traveling, and spending time with my family.