Lance Wiggs: Should I stay or should I go?
OPINION: An entrepreneur muses on liviing in New Zealand, versus alternatives like Australia, Singapore and the US.
OPINION: An entrepreneur muses on liviing in New Zealand, versus alternatives like Australia, Singapore and the US.
OPINION: Comments after nn NBR Weekend Review post by Ben Kepes (Christchurch's punishing 'new normal') have morphed into a discussion about where to live.
Some advocate Australia, others sing the praises of New Zealand.
I've shopped around over the years, living in two Australian (Fremantle and Melbourne), four New Zealand (Wellington, Nelson, Palmerston North and Auckland) and two American (New Haven CT and Washington DC) cities, along with London and South Africa's Richards Bay - each of these for at least 10 months, and most for around two years.
I've also spent at least 2 months, sometimes accumulated over time, in other cities including Dallas, Wilmington DE, Boston, Paris, and Rio do Janeiro. If we move to 1 month then the list gets longer still, but includes Milan, Panama, perhaps Singapore and probably Sydney.
Right now I'm visiting Singapore again, which is magically efficient. Getting out of Changi airport is startlingly fast, with no waits and a light train to accelerate things. The immigration guy had "Welcome to Singapore" branded sweets on his desk for me to grab as he perfunctorily stamped my passport. Forget about asking for reasons why you are visiting - just come.
Singapore is bustling, warm and the city keeps on going. But after a few hours you miss the other kind of green, the way of life we have in New Zealand and the sense of being home.
It took three hours to drive from Washington DC to anywhere interesting to hike, and once there I could only wonder what everyone else was raving about.
In South Africa, I couldn't even go for a walk around the town, and in London the sun disappeared for several months - I arrived at work before it came up, and left after it had gone down.
In New Haven and DC large chunks of the cities were centers of urban poverty, violence and a sense of hopelessness, and never mind the homeless people perpetually on the streets in the freezing cold and burning heat. Rio was a city of sun and crime, although the fruit was sublime, while Fremantle was filled with fighting bogons each Thursday to Sunday night.
Freo was a cultural desert that hours of riding in sand did little to assuage. Melbourne is probably the best of the offshore bunch, and I do enjoy visiting, but still dispair at the lack of decent doses of green close by.
It's personal decision for us all, but while other places allow you to chase career, money, friends or adventure, New Zealand is increasingly offering that ability while also delivering a lifestyle that costs millions elsewhere. So by all means we should keep encouraging Kiwis to seek fame and fortune, education and adventure offshore, but let's also keep building on New Zealand's strengths so it's a compelling place to live and return to.
Three of those strengths are the quality and culture of the people, our nature and a dynamic economy.
The work done on our culture is impressive, and in particular the rise of Te Reo and the rise of iwi as economic and cultural institutions are critical to the nation. I'm also a big fan of the immigration of people from the Pacific and Asia regions, which are tuning Auckland into a distinctive and dynamic city. Creating and using spaces like Wellington's harbour and Auckland's Wynard Quarter are also an important part of the process.
Our education system continues to rank well externally, but there remains a large gap before we reach the professionalism of Finland. We cannot rest, but on average I rate our people as second to none, as do many employers across the world. We don't have the elite universities that the USA, France and the UK have, but we are sending increasing numbers of our students to them, and are in return seeing increasing numbers of their alumni, New Zealand and foreign, living in New Zealand.
We are blessed with ridiculous levels of natural beauty in New Zealand, as any trip overseas will reinforce.
Some giant works have helped bring back native wildlife, including the removal of mammalian pests from several sanctuaries such as Kapiti, Tiri Tiri Maitangi, Campbell Island and Maungatautari. The work needs to continue, including the cheaper higher impact work to remove pests in our sub antarctic islands, more marine protected areas around New Zealand to reduce stress and boost marine diversity as well as improve fishing. Let's continue the slow and steady build-up of a network of connected pest free havens.
Coming back to New Zealand is often difficult after a heady career dealing, say, in billions of dollars. The economy and industry tiny here, our domestic industries are often sleepy versus their foreign peers, and many don't seem to understand offshore experiences.
So for those coming back after a senior career offshore, a word of advice: don't look for a job. Look instead to enter the really dynamic part of our economy by starting something new. As Prof. Paul Callaghan is fond of saying, we are very good in New Zealand at doing everything else.
Not for us the big dirty industries, nor the global consumer goods we all own, but instead the quiet conquering of global niches, such as online accounting or frequency control. There are plenty of people and tools to help, and New Zealand is a wonderfully easy place to start and run a business.
So if you are considering leaving, then make sure you come back bursting with ideas and energy to start something. And if you are considering a return, then now is the hour. New Zealand is doing reasonably well during this global recession, and it's time to get going and do something about addressing the markets in our enormous trade free zone.
Lance Wiggs is an independent consultant providing management, strategy, growth and valuation consulting to industrial, media and internet based businesses. He blogs at Lancewiggs.com. He lives in Auckland and Wellington.