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With boom, China faces work force shortages (IHT) Updated: 2006-08-15 21:26
http://www.iht.com/articles/2006/08/15/bloomberg/sxoutsource.php
SHANGHAI -- In the three years since receiving his engineering degree in
Shanghai, Jason Zhang has switched jobs twice and quintupled his salary as
overseas companies scour China for professional workers.
"If you have
language skills, if you have technical skills, it's very easy to find a job,"
says Zhang, 26, who speaks fluent English and now writes software for
International Business Machines. "There are more jobs than even two years ago
because of the outsourcing from Europe and the US."
Employers like
General Electric, Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer and Ernst & Young are
struggling to find engineers, lawyers and accountants as Chinese universities
fail to turn out qualified professionals, especially those who speak English.
The shortage is threatening expansion plans and driving up salaries in the
world's fastest-growing major economy.
"We could argue that more than
water, energy and infrastructure, talent is the greatest constraint on China's
growth," said Andrew Grant, who heads the greater China office of McKinsey, a
consulting firm that advises two-thirds of the Fortune 1000
companies.
Fewer than 10 percent of Chinese job seekers are qualified for
accounting, finance and engineering jobs at overseas companies, according to a
November report by McKinsey that was based on interviews with more than 80 human
resources officials. Most lack English skills and a "cultural fit," the report
said.
Ernst & Young, which plans to expand its work force in China
fivefold to 25,000 in the next decade, has turned down clients because it cannot
hire enough accountants, said Anthony Wu, a senior adviser and former chairman
of the firm's China office.
China lifted a one-year ban on share sales
this year, and public companies are required to meet international accounting
standards by next year, spurring demand for accountants.
The country has
69,000 licensed accountants and needs more than 300,000, said Chen Yugui,
secretary general of the Chinese Institute of Certified Public Accountants.
China did not have a university major in certified public accounting until
1994.
"The gap between the need and the supply is still huge," Chen
said.
Other professions are suffering, too. Even though a third of
China's university graduates receive engineering degrees, international
companies cannot find enough engineers. Many graduates are not qualified because
they are steeped in theory and have not learned to handle projects or work in a
team, McKinsey said in its report.
Freshfields, a London-based law firm
that has offices in 18 countries, is searching for qualified lawyers as it plans
to add as many as 65 attorneys in China over the next five years, said Mary
Wicks, human resources director for Freshfields in Asia. Freshfields is
recruiting lawyers who are fluent in Mandarin and have international law
degrees.
China has 120,000 lawyers, or one for every 10,800 people,
compared with a ratio of one to 375 in England and Wales.
"Competition is
tough," Wicks said.
Companies are increasing pay and benefits to attract
talented workers. The average salary for accountants at firms such as Ernst
& Young and Deloitte & Touche Tohmatsu rose 30 percent to US$9,000 last
year, according to a survey by Mercer Human Resource Consulting, based in New
York.
Ernst & Young is offering more vacation time and flexible work
schedules, said Catherine Yen, head of human resources for China.
In the
first half of this year, average annual wages in urban China rose 14.3 percent
from a year earlier to US$1,160, the National Bureau of Statistics
reported.
Many companies are responding to the shortage by expanding
internship programs and sponsoring university training programs.
General
Electric has forged relationships with 17 of China's 50 top universities,
including Fudan University in Shanghai and Peking University, said Heather Wang,
personnel director for GE in China. "China has a significant imbalance of supply
and demand for talents," Wang said. "It's still tough to find people who are
strong in technical expertise and bilingual."
The search for talent has
led to rapid turnover. Manpower, one of the world's largest providers of
temporary workers, said in June that 24 percent of the more than 300 employees
it had surveyed in China planned to leave within the next year.
Ernst
& Young, one of the biggest US accounting firms, has watched its own clients
lure away auditors.
"Everyone is striving very hard, so they poach," Wu,
the former chairman, said. "Who better to pinch than the auditors working on
your company?"
The loss of senior employees is especially costly in China
because of the concept of "guanxi," or relationships based on mutual interests,
said Victor Apps, Manulife Financial's general manager for Asia. Manulife, the
biggest Canadian insurer, has 12 offices and 4,500 workers in China, and is
preparing to open offices in the cities of Jiaxing and Jiangmen, as well as in
Shandong province.
"Guanxi and relationships are very important to
business," Apps said. Workers are the winners in this competition.
Zhang,
who has been at IBM for a year, said that his first job at a software developer
paid 2,000 yuan, or US$251, a month. Within six months, Citibank hired him away
for twice as much. Now he earns 10,000 yuan a month.
"For young people
today, job security is really not a problem," Zhang said.
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