China Daily

Beijing eases rules on foreign recruiters

- By DU JUAN dujuan@chinadaily.com.cn

Foreign headhuntin­g companies see opportunit­y and innovation in newly announced policies in Beijing’s recruitmen­t market and say they expect the whole industry will benefit.

Foreign talent agencies can now own up to 70 percent of a joint venture registered in the Chinese capital, up from 49 percent, Chen Bei, a spokeswoma­n for the city’s Human Resources and Social Security Bureau, said on Tuesday.

Also, a requiremen­t has been removed that foreign investors have at least three years of experience in the recruitmen­t industry overseas before entering the Beijing market.

“This is the most open policy in China’s headhuntin­g market and will bring benefits to both foreign investors and Chinese companies that are short on senior talent,” Chen said.

Simon Lance, managing director for China at Hays Specialist Recruitmen­t, a UK-listed multinatio­nal company, called it a positive move that will drive innovation and boost more cooperatio­n between Chinese and foreign headhuntin­g companies.

“The policy will cause more competitio­n of course because it encourages more investors to come to Beijing, ... but it will drive innovation, which is good for any business,” Lance said.

More foreign investors will seek Chinese partners for joint ventures in the business, which is helpful in the transfer of knowledge and expertise between the two sides, he said.

China opened its recruitmen­t market around 2000. Since then, foreign headhuntin­g companies started to enter the market through joint ventures with Chinese partners.

Beijing’s new policy is among efforts to attract more overseas talent to the city.

Lance said it will take a year or two to see the positive effect in terms of landing foreign talent.

Wei Ran, director of Shanghai procuremen­t and supply chain at Michael Page, a British recruitmen­t firm, said China has become its second-largest human resources market and it is expanding its services to more local companies and opening new offices as it faces increasing competitio­n.

“China is a candidate-driven market,” she said. “Opportunit­ies are there.”

She said the increased share that foreign investors can own in joint ventures can help companies better organize their personnel and grow profit.

Xu Ye, consultant director of Dynamic Resources Asia, a recruitmen­t firm based in Vancouver, Canada, said the company may establish a Beijing office because of the new policy.

“The new policy may not represent much of a threat to current players, whether foreign or domestic, given that the industry underwent a shakeout during the financial crisis. The ones that survived have their own strengths,” she said.

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