Industry safeguards

Open pathways without building a captive labour pipeline.

Employers can contribute knowledge, opportunities and pooled funding. They must not control students, curriculum, occupation supply or the wages of the future workforce.

Industry informs and co-invests; it does not control individual pathways or national training supply.

Why this matters

A programme can help students and still distort a labour market.

An employer or sector might support extra training because workers are genuinely needed. It might also benefit from oversupply that weakens wages or bargaining power. The governance must be designed for both possibilities—not merely the brochure version.

Non-negotiable safeguards

No ownership rights over a young person’s future.

Pooled contributions

Industry funding goes into independently governed pools, not employer-controlled student accounts.

No exclusive recruitment

Support buys no first refusal, compulsory service or private access to participant data.

No curriculum control

Employers advise; they do not own curriculum, qualification standards or occupation quotas.

Portable credentials

Learning and qualifications must remain useful across employers and regions.

Student pathway choice

Participants can change direction without losing their account to a disappointed sponsor.

No funding claim before commitment

Industry money is not recognised in the central model until it is contractually committed and independently governed.

Independent workforce governance

Employers need a seat—not the steering wheel.

Labour-market decisions should include employers, educators, workers and unions, iwi, communities, government and independent forecasters.

  • Independent demand and supply forecasting
  • Wage, vacancy and job-quality monitoring
  • Completion, retention and career-progression tracking
  • Periodic review of funded pathway supply
  • Specific tests for oversupply, displacement and wage suppression
Success is not “more workers supplied”

Success is more young people entering productive, sustainable and appropriately paid pathways—with enough choice to leave a bad employer.

Questions for Stage 0

What happens when interests collide?

Funding versus influence

How much voice does a contributor receive, and which decisions remain completely beyond purchase?

National versus local demand

How are regional shortages balanced against portability and national oversupply?

Shortage versus job quality

Does a vacancy indicate genuine scarcity, poor wages, poor conditions or high turnover?

Student aspiration versus forecasting

How does advice inform choice without turning labour forecasts into instructions?