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Do employer groups help with dairy farm employment? Why hasn’t the idea ‘caught-on’?
Content Partner: Lincoln University. Dairy employer groups began to appear about 2000 in response to employment difficulties as the dairy farm labour market encountered low unemployment. Edkins and Tipples (2002) reported to LEW 10 on the development of the Amuri Dairy Employers Group (ADEG). Since...
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Main Authors: | , |
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Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Online Access: | Request full text |
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Summary: | Content Partner: Lincoln University. Dairy employer groups began to appear about 2000 in response to employment difficulties as the dairy farm labour
market encountered low unemployment. Edkins and Tipples (2002) reported to LEW 10 on the development of the
Amuri Dairy Employers Group (ADEG). Since then other groups and enterprises have been established and flourished
or failed. In this paper developments since 2002 are considered. Factors promoting their success are contrasted with
causes of failure. In that time the labour force in dairy farming has changed radically (Tipples, Callister & Trafford,
2010). The paper considers how these changes have fitted with dairy employer groups and suggests ways in which the
benefits experienced could be further developed and shared more widely. |
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