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This Article is From May 05, 2011

Australia plans to train and hire 30,000 Indians

Melbourne: Up to 30,000 Australia-trained Indian graduates could be recruited to help deal with a skills shortage that threatens to severely impact this country's booming resources sector.

Officials of the two sides have initiated discussions with tertiary institutions and training bodies in both nations about opening up this country's training system, according to business daily 'Australian Financial Review'

Under the plan, as many as 100,000 Indians would be trained, with up to 30,000 Australia-trained graduates to be recruited locally.

The paper said India prompted the initiative after a realisation that it needs about one million skilled workers to develop its own mining industries.

Demand for the Indian graduates will rely on the demands of mining companies, which have also been involved in discussions with officials from both countries.

Australia's senior trade official in India, Peter Linford, told the daily that the skills training programme offered huge opportunities for education and industry.

Linford said Austrade was working with the mining sector and India's skills development group on the scheme which could become a model for other industries in other countries.

Indian trainees would be trained to Australian standards and employed on the same conditions as Australians. They would be subject to existing immigration rules.

A Skills Australia report earlier this week said Australia would need 2.4 million extra skilled workers in the next four years to meet the demands of the mining boom.

Treasurer Wayne Swan said the government's priority was to train Australians first and foremost for jobs but skilled migrants would be needed.

"What the government is going to do is train Australians.... we're going to make sure that Australians can participate in the benefits of the boom," Swan was quoted by the Australian Associated Press as saying.

"... there are some concentrations of inter-generational or welfare dependants in parts of the country that we need to deal with, we need to help those people back into the workforce."

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