China Daily (Hong Kong)

Crossing the Straits to recruit new blood

- By HU YONGQI

Xiamen, a port city in Fujian province, has recruited thousands of profession­als from locations around the country, including more than 3,000 from Taiwan.

The city, which occupies a key location facing the Taiwan Straits, plays a crucial role in the promotion of cross-Straits exchanges, including the recruitmen­t of personnel, according to Huang Qiang, the city’s executive vice-mayor.

It was the first city to initiate a mechanism to employ experts and profession­als from Taiwan, who will each be eligible for living expenses of as much as 1.5 million yuan ($223,800) a year, plus 4 million yuan to subsidize their work, he added.

Xiamen also works with agencies across the Straits to host recruitmen­t events, and is striving to attract profession­als and talent by developing fastgrowin­g industries. As of August 3, more than 3,000 people from Taiwan had moved to the city, he said.

After China initiated the reform and opening-up policy in 1978, many of the country’s best-educated people swarmed to first-tier cities, such as Beijing and Shanghai. However, as they attempt to develop and look to upgrade their industrial bases, many second-tier cities are releasing policies to attract people from other regions.

This year, the Xiamen government released a 45-point blueprint in an attempt to achieve a similar goal. The measures target profession­als in emerging sectors such as integrated circuits, new materials,

biomedicin­e and internetba­sed industries. Some of the newcomers could be granted as much as 100 million yuan each to develop their technologi­es and businesses, Huang said.

The city is also focusing on recruiting profession­als, including teachers, doctors and engineers. Renowned teachers will receive subsidies of as much as 1 million yuan each, while high-flying graduates from key universiti­es in other regions will get 200,000 yuan in subsidies if they opt to work in schools in Xiamen.

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