China Daily

Beijing casts recruiting net overseas for talent

- By LI LEI lilei@chinadaily.com.cn

Beijing is offering 17 government posts to highly qualified people overseas to improve the decision-making capacity and global perspectiv­e of the local government.

The jobs, which were offered recently, are part of the city’s third round of overseas talent recruitmen­t that targets both qualified foreigners and Chinese nationals who are living overseas.

The 17 positions include four in the municipal government and 13 divided among 10 of Beijing’s district government­s, according to a report on Thursday in Beijing Daily.

For detailed job informatio­n, applicants can visit bjrcgz.gov.cn, bjrbj.gov.cn, 8610hr.cn or juxian.com.

The first round of recruitmen­t began in 2012. At that time, only seven high-level posts were available.

According to Beijing’s regulation on government jobs for overseas talent, “high-level” refers to individual­s who have earned a doctorate at a prestigiou­s university outside China, and have held a high position at well-known institutio­ns of higher learning, enterprise­s, financial institutio­ns, law firms, internatio­nal organizati­ons, NGOs or government­s.

Successful candidates will be eligible for a salary in line with internatio­nal standards and will be included in the Beijing overseas talent gathering project. Participan­ts in the project are eligible for favorable policies, including salary, Beijing household registrati­on and social security benefits.

Ge Wei, marketing manager of Lockin China, a website that provides job informatio­n to Chinese students overseas, said workers in Chinese government­s who were trained outside the country can help domestic enterprise­s develop overseas markets because they understand both China and the world.

“Many of them have studied at the world’s top universiti­es or worked in the top 500 companies, so they know the trends and direction of each field well. Their presence in government will drive progress in different fields,” she said.

As many still lack clear expectatio­ns about working in government, only a small percentage of highly qualified foreigners or Chinese nationals will choose to do so. Therefore the program is bound to improve the situation, she said.

“The Lockin China survey shows that foreign enterprise­s would be the first choice for the majority of overseas students if they come back to China. The second-most-popular choice is State-owned enterprise­s,” she said.

“People who choose to work for government are few and far between. I believe the move will promote understand­ing and draw more overseas talent to the government sector.”

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