China Daily

Top expats get chance to help lead

Policies also to draw talent to parts of the country that need more support

- By YANG WANLI in Shenzhen yangwanli@chinadaily.com.cn

China will continue to strengthen preferenti­al policies to attract top foreign talent, encourage more of them to play a leading role at universiti­es, and further simplify work permit procedures, a senior official said.

The State Administra­tion of Foreign Experts Affairs and the Ministry of Education last year allowed 16 Chinese universiti­es to appoint expats as deans as part of a pilot project.

This year, the project will be expanded to more universiti­es, Zhang Jianguo, director of the foreign experts administra­tion, said in an exclusive interview on the sidelines of the Conference on Internatio­nal Exchange of Profession­als over the weekend in Shenzhen, Guangdong province.

“China values talent more than ever before. We’ll encourage more expats to play a leading role not only in the education sector, but also in some enterprise­s,” he said.

Schools and businesses are the workplaces that most frequently hire foreigners, accounting for 50 percent and 33 percent of all foreign employees, respective­ly, according to a report released at the conference.

Zhang said regulation­s will be drafted soon to provide better guidance in helping more foreign experts become leaders of some important research projects and participat­e in national science and technology programs.

“We will also encourage foreign experts to participat­e in the selection of China’s science and technology awards, in equal measure with their Chinese colleagues,” he said.

To encourage more foreign

We’ll encourage more expats to play a leading role not only in the education sector, but also in some enterprise­s.”

Zhang Jianguo, director of the foreign experts administra­tion

talent to work in regions like western China, that have a greater need for support, the administra­tion has launched pilot projects to provide financial and other preferenti­al policies to universiti­es.

Fifteen universiti­es joined in the project last year, according to Nie Biao, director of the administra­tion’s Cultural and Educationa­l Experts Department. He said the number of applicants is expected to grow this year.

Zhang said expedited visa applicatio­ns also will be available for top talent, like allowing them to do an applicatio­n online, without any paperwork, as well as cutting the time needed to complete the procedure from 10 to five working days and offering a visa of up to five years at a time.

“Together with other sectors, we may consider giving highend expats a quick way to get a multiple-entry visa with a longer validity period, to make sure that the visa issue will not become a hurdle preventing high-end overseas talent from coming to China,” he said.

More than 900,000 foreigners worked in China last year, according to the administra­tion. That same year, 1,576 permanent resident cards were issueed, according to the Ministry of Public Security’s Bureau of Exit and Entry Administra­tion.

In terms of lowering the threshold for permanent residence applicants, Zhang citied Shanghai as a model in reforming its talent recruitmen­t policies.

The city’s newest policy allows exp ats who have worked in the city for four consecutiv­e years and have lived in China for at least six months a year to apply for residence permits providing their salaries met required levels.

“Such preferenti­al policies show our determinat­ion and effort to welcome more top foreign talent to work and live in China,” Zhang said.

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