New Zealand remains an alluring place for jobseekers. Photo / 123RF
New Zealand remains an alluring place for jobseekers. Photo / 123RF
New Zealand remains an alluring place for jobseekers when it comes to attracting, retaining and developing staff after retaining its spot in the top 15 for the second straight year.
The annual World Talent Ranking 2017 report, compiled by the IMD World Competitiveness Centre, ranked New Zealand 15th out of63 countries surveyed.
Despite dropping one spot on last year's report, New Zealand still ranked higher than Australia, who came in at 19th.
European nations continued their dominance with Switzerland, Denmark and Belgium holding their top three positions from last year, with 11 of the top 15 located in Europe.
The World Talent Ranking is based on a country's performance in three main categories — investment and development, appeal and readiness — from a survey of more than 6000 business executives in 63 countries.
The categories assess how countries perform when it comes to education, apprenticeships, workplace training, language skills, cost of living, remuneration, tax rates — and quality of life.
The report found that New Zealand fared among the best in the world when it came to Readiness - the availability of skills and competencies in the talent pool - placing 8th.
However, New Zealand's lowest position came under the Investment & Development category, where we ranked 28th overall. Within this category New Zealand ranked outside the top 40 for pupil-teacher ratio in both primary and secondary education, apprenticeships, and 39th for employee training.
1. Switzerland 2. Denmark 3. Belgium 4. Austria 5. Finland 6. Netherlands 7. Norway 8. Germany 9. Sweden 10. Luxembourg 11. Canada 12. Hong Kong 13. Singapore 14. Ireland 15. New Zealand 16. United States 17. Cyprus 18. Iceland 19. Australia 20. Israel
New Zealand's full breakdown
Overall: 15th (Investment & Development 28th, Appeal 14th, Readiness 8th).