TSMIT Lifted to 70k — At Least 21,000 Will Fall Short! Employer Body: “This Threshold Is Unworkable!”

In the Home Affairs Minister’s remarks yesterday, the one thing we can be most certain ofis that from 1 July 2023, the TSMIT will rise from the current AUD 53,900 to AUD 70,000.


If you haven’t yet seen the news about these reforms, revisit [Everything You Need to Know About Today’s Major Australian Migration Reforms] Points test / employer-sponsored / 500 / 485 / parent / GTI / investor — all covered! $53,900 jumps to 70k next financial year!

It will definitely affect the employer-sponsored Subclass 482, and may also affect the 491. As we’ve said again and again — what about the transitional arrangements? Will the 491 really be affected? Where is the cut-off date? We all still have to wait and see. Of the reform directions announced, the 70k from 1 July is the one we should see the detailed rules for soonest.


Today, let’s set the policy detail aside for a momentand look at the reactions — not just from applicants


At least 21,000 people won’t meet it — and what about the 491?

A TSMIT increase has been rumoured for a long time and was always going to happen — it has now been confirmed at 70k. The Home Affairs Minister stated that 90% of skilled workers earn more than $53,900; 70k sits above the $63,000 favoured by business groups and below the 90k argued for by the unions.


As reported by the AFR, around 21,000 holders of the 482 TSS visa earn between AUD 53,900 and AUD 70,000,and if their employers do not lift their salaries above AUD 70,000, they will have to leave Australia when they renew their visas.


According to a Grattan Institute report, the lower-paid 482 cohort is mainly made up ofroles such as cooks, chefs, retail and hospitality managers, and some in the automotive and construction industries.


Of 482 holders in the accommodation and food services industry, around 90% earn less than AUD 70,000in retail, meanwhile, 50% are below this threshold



For this reason, Suresh Manickam, CEO of Restaurant & Catering Australia, criticised the new threshold as unworkable. Cooks, for example, are one of the most common occupations for employer sponsorship, and employers rely heavily on the 482 to fill these vacancies. For small businesses in particular, this threshold is very difficult.


And this doesn’t even account for the 491 holders who could potentially be affected.



Opposition migration spokesperson: We want the impact on the whole economy explained

“When it comes to the care sector, can she explain what impact this will have, particularly for regional areas?We want to see this question answered.”


Next up: the government has more salary thresholds to decide

Employer sponsorship may soon also include a “high-income stream”, which would be faster and more direct, though the government has not yet decided where to set this high-income threshold.


The reform recommendations report suggests that the “high-income stream” threshold should be no lower than AUD 98,000. They expect this group would include most high-income, highly skilled intra-company transferees,who typically bring global skills that don’t exist in Australia or are in short supply, and who often come to deliver specific projects without staying long term.


The “mid-income stream”would be based on the latest labour-market data,so the list would be updated frequently and require no labour-market testing. The income requirement would be lower than the high-income stream above,but higher than AUD 70,000


Andrew McKellar, CEO of the Australian Chamber of Commerce and Industry, welcomed Labor’s reform direction, while seeking more detail on the decision to allow 482 holders to change employers.


Points test: are partner-related changes also being recommended?

The reform recommendations report says that applicants could earn additional, varied points based on their partner’s circumstances


Meanwhile, long-term work in Australia may become less important,because it effectively “encourages” weaker applicants to “make up points” through extended residence.

\ | /

On the TSMIT change, the government may not bring any impact at all to 491 applicants and holders.And even within employer sponsorship — even among employers themselves — there are differing views on this 70k.The Home Affairs Minister dropped a lot of “bombshells” yesterday, with very little detail — many people feel something is about to happen, but don’t know exactly what.
A lot of what everyone’s been waiting for should become clearer step by step from here.The Budget will also be handed down on the evening of 9 May, so there should be more news!

So, for everyone who needs real-time updates, you can still add our consultant to join the groupplease note: “Reform”



Recommended past articles

Everything You Need to Know About the Major Australian Migration Reforms: points test / employer-sponsored / 500 / 485 / parent / GTI / investor — all covered!

“How many points does my occupation need to be invited?” The April state-nomination invitation round-up is here!

Offshore finance / marketing / conference organisers / project administrators / information and organisation — still being invited at low scores!

Migration News Group


2023 


Step 1: Press and hold to add our consultant

Step 2: After adding, please


Study Abroad · Migration · Visas — We’re the experts



Attention!please verifya genuineNewstarsec consultant!


Study & Migration Enquiries — Consultants by Location


Sydney

Melbourne

Canberra

Brisbane

Adelaide

Hobart

Beijing

Guangzhou

Follow the Newstarsec official account

Reply in our official accountwith one of the numbers below or any keyword (not in the article comments), to get the most timely, professional migration news!Reply [A] to view the directory (covering every topic)!

Reply: 0000 → View the 16 Nov policy update (491 + skilled migration points test)

Reply: 000 → Latest visa / citizenship processing times

Reply: 001 → Latest 189 EOI official report

Reply: 002 → 189 Skilled Independent migration

Reply: 003 → 190 state nomination by state

Reply: 004 → 489 regional state nomination

Reply: 005 → Student business and investor migration

Reply: 006 → Parent migration visas

Reply: 007 → Employer-sponsored visas

Reply: 008 → Subclass 485 visa

Reply: 009 → Partner migration / points

Reply: 010 → Work-experience points

Reply: 011 → PY points

Reply: 012 → NAATI / CCL points

Reply: 013 → Regional points

Reply: 014 → Visitor and family-visit visas

Reply: 015 → Working holiday visa

Reply: 016 → TAFE study

Reply: 017 → Canada migration for Australian students

Reply: 018 → Subclass 407 Training visa

Reply: 019 → Subclass 408 Temporary Activity visa

Reply: 020 → New Zealand migration

Recommended for 2023