Cracks Of Light At End Of The Tunnel For Small And Medium Businesses
Sustained employment growth is being driven by small and medium businesses continuing to hire staff despite economic pressures, according to the latest Employment Hero Jobs Report.
Month on month data held steady with April employment growth up 0.5%, slightly lower than February and March at 0.9% and 0.7% respectively.
The Jobs Report, based on data from more than 2,000 Kiwi businesses and 85,000 employee records, is a monthly representation of the employment market, especially the SME sector.
“These incremental gains over the last few months indicate SMEs are hiring but taking a cautious approach given the continued economic uncertainty,” says Neil Webster, Employment Hero General Manager NZ.
“It’s still a little fragile out there; there is no denying it. However, SMEs are working through it, sticking to their knitting, and keeping on going.
“Another positive is employment growth continues its upward trajectory over the long term, with 8.8% year on year growth in April compared to just 1.5% this time last year.”
Uptick in average hours worked
Webster says countering the reality of the current economic landscape is the increase in average hours worked, up 2.2% year on year and up 2.1% against three months ago.
“Not only are we seeing employment growth but with average hours worked also increasing it means employees have the opportunity to take home more in their pay packet,” he says.
There was a significant uptick in hours worked for casual employees - 8.4% year on year and 1.9% against three months ago. “This means casual workers are getting extra hours during the week which is great news for the likes of students, whose living costs continue to bite.”
Wages show signs of life
Wages have had a bounce back, up 0.8% month on month after three months of negative or stagnant growth. However, with wages up just 0.4% year on year, the data shows a continued trend of being a real-term loss for workers, with it still well below inflation.
“The monthly gain is positive, but the year on year growth figure is the lowest in the last 13 months. In April last year, wage growth stood at 5.4% year on year, with a rapid decline since September.”
Regionally, Auckland leads wage growth at 1.4%, which is positive in contrast to negative growth in Canterbury (-0.5%), Wellington (-0.4%) and Waikato (-3.0%).
Youth employment stutters
In line with Statistics New Zealand’s latest youth employment data for the first quarter of 2026, Employment Hero’s April report shows employment growth was down -0.9% in the 18-24 age bracket month on month.
However, year on year youth employment growth data shows an up tick of 12%.
Webster says the year on year figure is likely to be driven by a swing towards hiring casual workers as businesses face ongoing economic pressure.
“For example, SMEs in New Zealand are heavily represented in hospitality, retail, and trades sectors. These sectors may be having a ‘micro-boom’ in hiring young people which isn’t happening in the corporate or manufacturing sectors.
“While casual roles were down 2.1% month on month, they were up 20% year on year, which can benefit the younger end of the workforce because they are ideal candidates for casual contracts rather than permanent roles. This enables businesses to maintain operational flexibility.”
About Employment Hero
Employment Hero is the global authority on employment, offering a world-leading Employment Operating System (eOS) that simplifies and optimises every stage of the employment process. Its award-winning platform combines HR, payroll, recruitment, and employee engagement tools with the groundbreaking employment superapp, EH Work, which integrates career management and financial wellbeing. Serving over 350,000 businesses and managing more than 2.5 million employees worldwide, Employment Hero reduces administrative burdens by up to 80%, enabling organisations to focus on their goals and create more productive, engaged teams. By revolutionising the employment marketplace, Employment Hero is making employment easier, more valuable, and rewarding for everyone.
REINZ: Buyer Activity Softens As Living Costs Remain A Consideration Across Key Regions
Better Taxes for a Better Future: Tax Policy Welcome Contribution, But Missed Opportunity To Tackle Wealth Inequality
Google Threat Intelligence Group - GTIG: Google Threat Report Warns AI-Driven Cyber Operations Are Scaling Across Global Threat Landscape
Commerce Commission: Baseline Research Report On The State Of Competition In New Zealand
University of Auckland: Junk Food Designed To Make Us Eat More, Study Finds
Spark: New Report Sets Out Outcomes-Led Approach To Lift Rural Connectivity Using The Right Mix Of Technologies

