Education Counts

Page navigation links

  • Education Counts Logo
  • Skip to Primary Navigation Menu
  • Skip to Secondary Navigation Menu
  • Skip to search
  • Skip to content

Site Search

Site Search

Site navigation menus

  • Know your region
  • Find your nearest school
  • Early learning services
  • Directories
  • Publications
  • Statistics
  • Topics
  • Data Services

Search the education counts website

Find pages with

Narrow results by:

Skills in New Zealand: Survey of Adult Skills 2023 (PIAAC) Publications

Publication Details

This report provides a first look at findings from New Zealand’s participation in the OECD’s 2023 Survey of Adult Skills. The Survey directly measured the skills of New Zealand adults aged 16 to 65 in literacy, numeracy and adaptive problem solving. New Zealand was one of 31 countries participating in the survey. The Survey is part of the OECD’s Programme for the International Assessment of Adult Competencies (PIAAC).

Author(s): Dee Earle, Principal Research Analyst, Paul Satherley, Senior Research Analyst, and Nicola Marshall, Senior Research Analyst, Ministry of Education

Date Published: December 2024

Summary

New Zealand’s results in the 2023 Survey of Adult Skills must be treated with caution, especially when comparing them to the results of the previous survey in 2014 and those of other countries.

The OECD warns that our 2023 results may not be representative of the whole population because of having a much lower response rate than in 2014.

The 2023 Survey indicates that there has been a large drop in the average literacy and numeracy skills of New Zealanders aged 16 to 65 since the previous Survey of Adult Skills in 2014.

Other countries have also had large changes in scores and the OECD has applied some level of caution to the results of most of them.

A lot of the change in scores between 2014 and 2023 is likely to be due to the difficulties of surveying post-COVID-19 and lower engagement by survey respondents.

The survey was run in 2022 and 2023, just after the COVID-19 restrictions were lifted. High employment rates made it difficult to recruit and retain both interviewers and interviewees. The Auckland floods and Cyclone Gabrielle in 2023 also disrupted data collection.

The drop in measured skills in New Zealand was across all population groups, and larger for men and people with lower skills. It is not plausible that there have been such large drops in actual skills across all groups.

Very little of the change in average scores in New Zealand can be explained by changes in the make-up of our population.

However, the results are still valuable for highlighting groups whose low skills may limit their opportunities to participate in work and everyday life, and for developing options to better support these groups.

Men were more likely than women to have low literacy skills, but men were more likely than women to have high numeracy skills.

People with no or low qualifications were more likely to have low skills and those with degrees were more likely to have high skills.

Having a home language other than English was more strongly associated with low skills than how long people had lived in New Zealand.

Navigation

  • All Tertiary Education

Downloads

  • Full Report (PDF, 803.2 KB)

Related pages

  • International Study: PIAAC

Contact us

For more information about the content on this webpage, please email the Tertiary Mailbox

Home Close Menu
  • Know your Region Show submenu
  • Find your nearest school Show submenu
  • Early Learning Services Show submenu
  • Directories Show submenu
    • Early Childhood Services Directory – APIShow submenu
    • Early Childhood ServicesShow submenu
    • School Directory – APIShow submenu
    • New Zealand SchoolsShow submenu
    • Māori Schools DirectoryShow submenu
      • Māori Schools DirectoryShow submenu
    • Pacific Schools DirectoryShow submenu
    • Tertiary ProvidersShow submenu
    • School Mergers, Closures & NewShow submenu
  • Publications Show submenu
    • Early Childhood EducationShow submenu
    • MāoriShow submenu
      • KME & MMEShow submenu
      • English-medium EducationShow submenu
      • KME or MME, & English-mediumShow submenu
    • SchoolingShow submenu
      • LearnersShow submenu
        • Learners in GeneralShow submenu
        • Education | Learning OutcomesShow submenu
        • Student Engagement | BehaviourShow submenu
      • Learning Support & WellbeingShow submenu
      • WorkforceShow submenu
      • Parents & WhānauShow submenu
      • School Networks | SystemShow submenu
      • CurriculumShow submenu
      • Digital TechnologyShow submenu
      • Large Scale International StudiesShow submenu
    • PacificShow submenu
    • Tertiary EducationShow submenu
      • COVID-19Show submenu
      • LearnersShow submenu
      • Beyond StudyShow submenu
        • DestinationsShow submenu
          • The mobility patterns of New Zealand's doctoral graduatesShow submenu
        • EmploymentShow submenu
        • Income & EarningsShow submenu
        • Other Economic OutcomesShow submenu
        • Social OutcomesShow submenu
      • MonitoringShow submenu
      • Literacy & NumeracyShow submenu
      • Research Performance/FundingShow submenu
      • SystemShow submenu
      • Annual ReportsShow submenu
      • Occasional PapersShow submenu
      • NZ University RankingsShow submenu
      • e-learningShow submenu
    • Learning SupportShow submenu
    • InternationalShow submenu
    • Publication SeriesShow submenu
  • Statistics Show submenu
    • Action Plan for Pacific Education measurement framework dataShow submenu
    • Annual monitoring reading recoveryShow submenu
    • Apprenticeship boostShow submenu
    • Attainment of 18-year-oldsShow submenu
    • AttendanceShow submenu
    • Beyond studyShow submenu
    • Daily attendance dashboardShow submenu
    • ECE financesShow submenu
    • ECE servicesShow submenu
    • ECE staffingShow submenu
    • Early learning participationShow submenu
    • Early leaving exemptionsShow submenu
    • Entering & leaving teachingShow submenu
    • Financial resourcingShow submenu
    • Financial support for tertiary studentsShow submenu
    • First Year Fees Free tertiary educationShow submenu
    • Funding to schoolsShow submenu
    • HomeschoolingShow submenu
    • StaffingShow submenu
      • How does New Zealand’s tertiary education staffing compare internationally?Show submenu
    • Initial teacher education statisticsShow submenu
    • International students in NZShow submenu
    • Language use in ECEShow submenu
    • Micro-credentials & training schemesShow submenu
    • Māori language in schoolingShow submenu
    • NZ's workplace-based learnersShow submenu
    • National school roll projectionsShow submenu
    • Number of schoolsShow submenu
    • Ongoing resourcing schemeShow submenu
    • Pacific language in schoolingShow submenu
    • Per student funding for schoolsShow submenu
    • School board representationShow submenu
    • School boardsShow submenu
    • School donationsShow submenu
    • School leaver pathwaysShow submenu
    • School leaver's attainmentShow submenu
    • School rollsShow submenu
    • School subject enrolmentShow submenu
    • Stand-downs, suspensions, exclusions & expulsionsShow submenu
    • Teacher numbersShow submenu
      • 2021Show submenu
      • 2020Show submenu
    • Teacher turnoverShow submenu
    • Tertiary achievement & attainmentShow submenu
    • Tertiary enrolments in language courses, including Te Reo Māori coursesShow submenu
    • Tertiary participationShow submenu
    • Tertiary population dataShow submenu
    • Tertiary researchShow submenu
    • Tertiary summary tablesShow submenu
    • Pathways from Year 11Show submenu
    • Transient studentsShow submenu
    • Traumatic incidentsShow submenu
    • University rankings fact sheetsShow submenu
    • Vocational education & trainingShow submenu
  • Topics Show submenu
    • He Whakaaro: Education InsightsShow submenu
  • Data Services Show submenu

Site information

  • Site map
  • Contact us
  • About this site
  • Glossary
  • Copyright, Legal & Privacy
  • Links
  • © Education Counts 2026
  • Ministry of Education logo.
  • New Zealand Government logo.
Scroll to top of page