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Foreigners to enter talent game
(08/13/2001) (China Daily)
Instead of leaking in through illicit channels, foreign
capital will now be allowed to play an above-board role in China's human resources market.
The central government is drafting rules to regulate
operation of overseas talents seeking institutions, said Tang Jun, vice-director of the
Department of Human Resources Exchange under the Ministry of Personnel.
Tang said the potential of China's human resources market has
attracted wide attention from foreign companies engaged in headhunting.
In fact, some foreign headhunters have already set up shop in
China, eager to claim some of the market, he said.
"It is no use trying to block them, so the government
has decided to open the door cautiously and step by step,'' Tang noted.
In its initial phase, opening of the market will involve
lifting restrictions on the establishment of human resources joint ventures with foreign
capital.
Sun Weiyan, a professor at the International Business
Management School with the University of International Business and Economics, said the
new policy will have an impact on domestic headhunters.
Foreign companies in the human resources service industry are
often experienced and enjoy solid financial backing -- luxuries most domestic firms lack,
he said.
Current estimates show 4,100 domestic companies competing in
the human resources sector. Many of them are small, with less than 10 employees, and have
meagre talent files.
"The influx of foreign headhunters is a threat to poor
domestic performers, but it will also help restructure the market. Competitive domestic
firms will manage to survive and an orderly market will emerge,'' he predicted.
Meanwhile, talented Chinese will enjoy a convenient channel
to jobs with multinational companies, he said.
Despite the spectre of increased competition, some domestic
companies showed confidence in their future.
Wang Changjiang, manager of a Beijing-based headhunting firm,
said human resources form a special industry and the foreign companies lack crucial
understanding of the local culture.
"Signs showed many foreign companies which operate
underground have had to retreat, including some famous firms, so we are not worried about
the future,'' he said.
Huang Jian, president of Zhuoyue Management Consulting Co,
said the domestic and foreign companies can join hands to make the market bigger.
"Helped by foreign counterparts' experience and pushed
by competition, domestic firms will find themselves working a more orderly market and more
companies and job-seekers will come to us for help,'' he said.
According to statistics, 10 million people are expected to
change jobs this year but less than 10 per cent will go through human resources companies.
(China Daily by Dai Yan)
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